* [Qemu-devel] VFIO v2 design plan @ 2011-08-26 17:05 Alex Williamson 2011-08-30 3:04 ` David Gibson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: Alex Williamson @ 2011-08-26 17:05 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Benjamin Herrenschmidt Cc: chrisw, Alexey Kardashevskiy, kvm, Paul Mackerras, linux-pci@vger.kernel.org, agraf, qemu-devel, David Gibson, aafabbri, iommu, Avi Kivity, Roedel, Joerg, linuxppc-dev, benve I don't think too much has changed since the previous email went out, but it seems like a good idea to post a summary in case there were suggestions or objections that I missed. VFIO v2 will rely on the platform iommu driver reporting grouping information. Again, a group is a set of devices for which the iommu cannot differentiate transactions. An example would be a set of devices behind a PCI-to-PCI bridge. All transactions appear to be from the bridge itself rather than devices behind the bridge. Platforms are free to have whatever constraints they need to for what constitutes a group. I posted a rough draft of patch to implement that for the base iommu driver and VT-d, adding an iommu_device_group callback on iommu ops. The iommu base driver also populates an iommu_group sysfs file for each device that's part of a group. Members of the same group return the same value via either the sysfs or iommu_device_group. The value returned is arbitrary, should not be assumed to be persistent across boots, and is left to the iommu driver to generate. There are some implementation details around how to do this without favoring one bus over another, but the interface should be bus/device type agnostic in the end. When the vfio module is loaded, character devices will be created for each group in /dev/vfio/$GROUP. Setting file permissions on these files should be sufficient for providing a user with complete access to the group. Opening this device file provides what we'll call the "group fd". The group fd is restricted to only work with a single mm context. Concurrent opens will be denied if the opening process mm does not match. The group fd will provide interfaces for enumerating the devices in the group, returning a file descriptor for each device in the group (the "device fd"), binding groups together, and returning a file descriptor for iommu operations (the "iommu fd"). A group is "viable" when all member devices of the group are bound to the vfio driver. Until that point, the group fd only allows enumeration interfaces (ie. listing of group devices). I'm currently thinking enumeration will be done by a simple read() on the device file returning a list of dev_name()s. Once the group is viable, the user may bind the group to another group, retrieve the iommu fd, or retrieve device fds. Internally, each of these operations will result in an iommu domain being allocated and all of the devices attached to the domain. The purpose of binding groups is to share the iommu domain. Groups making use of incompatible iommu domains will fail to bind. Groups making use of different mm's will fail to bind. The vfio driver may reject some binding based on domain capabilities, but final veto power is left to the iommu driver[1]. If a user makes use of a group independently and later wishes to bind it to another group, all the device fds and the iommu fd must first be closed. This prevents using a stale iommu fd or accessing devices while the iommu is being switched. Operations on any group fds of a merged group are performed globally on the group (ie. enumerating the devices lists all devices in the merged group, retrieving the iommu fd from any group fd results in the same fd, device fds from any group can be retrieved from any group fd[2]). Groups can be merged and unmerged dynamically. Unmerging a group requires the device fds for the outgoing group are closed. The iommu fd will remain persistent for the remaining merged group. If a device within a group is unbound from the vfio driver while it's in use (iommu fd refcnt > 0 || device fd recnt > 0), vfio will block the release and send netlink remove requests for every opened device in the group (or merged group). If the device fds are not released and subsequently the iommu fd released as well, vfio will kill the user process after some delay. At some point in the future we may be able to adapt this to perform a hard removal and revoke all device access without killing the user. The iommu fd supports dma mapping and unmapping ioctls as well as some, yet to be defined and possibly architecture specific, iommu description interfaces. At some point we may also make use of read/write/mmap on the iommu fd as means to setup dma. The device fds will largely support the existing vfio interface, with generalizations to make it non-pci specific. We'll access mmio/pio/pci config using segmented offset into the device fd. Interrupts will use the existing mechanisms (eventfds/irqfd). We'll need to add ioctls to describe the type of device, number, size, and type of each resource and available interrupts. We still have outstanding questions with how devices are exposed in qemu, but I think that's largely a qemu-vfio problem and the vfio kernel interface described here supports all the interesting ways that devices can be exposed as individuals or sets. I'm currently working on code changes to support the above and will post as I complete useful chunks. Thanks, Alex [1] Implementation note: the current iommu ops makes some of this awkward. We'll need to temporarily setup a domain for incoming devices to validate the capabilities of that domain, then tear it down and try to attach devices to the existing domain. In particular I'm thinking of the cache coherence capability and whether we remap existing dma mappings to allow this to change or just reject as incompatible (I'm leaning to the latter). [2] Implementation note: I think a container object makes sense here where reads/ioctls are passed from the group to the container, which performs them across all groups making use of that container (there are no performance critical paths through the group fd). This also implies the enumeration interface should report groups so we can easily see which groups are merged. The group fd could simply read as: group: 1234 device: 0000:00:19.0 group: 5678 device: 0000:01:00.0 device: 0000:01:00.1 Some might say this is screaming for xml. Do we need to go there? We could also do this via the netlink interface. Suggestions welcome. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VFIO v2 design plan 2011-08-26 17:05 [Qemu-devel] VFIO v2 design plan Alex Williamson @ 2011-08-30 3:04 ` David Gibson 2011-08-30 4:24 ` Alex Williamson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: David Gibson @ 2011-08-30 3:04 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alex Williamson Cc: aafabbri, Alexey Kardashevskiy, kvm, Paul Mackerras, Roedel, Joerg, agraf, qemu-devel, chrisw, iommu, Avi Kivity, linux-pci@vger.kernel.org, linuxppc-dev, benve On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 11:05:23AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > > I don't think too much has changed since the previous email went out, > but it seems like a good idea to post a summary in case there were > suggestions or objections that I missed. > > VFIO v2 will rely on the platform iommu driver reporting grouping > information. Again, a group is a set of devices for which the iommu > cannot differentiate transactions. An example would be a set of devices > behind a PCI-to-PCI bridge. All transactions appear to be from the > bridge itself rather than devices behind the bridge. Platforms are free > to have whatever constraints they need to for what constitutes a group. > > I posted a rough draft of patch to implement that for the base iommu > driver and VT-d, adding an iommu_device_group callback on iommu ops. > The iommu base driver also populates an iommu_group sysfs file for each > device that's part of a group. Members of the same group return the > same value via either the sysfs or iommu_device_group. The value > returned is arbitrary, should not be assumed to be persistent across > boots, and is left to the iommu driver to generate. There are some > implementation details around how to do this without favoring one bus > over another, but the interface should be bus/device type agnostic in > the end. > > When the vfio module is loaded, character devices will be created for > each group in /dev/vfio/$GROUP. Setting file permissions on these files > should be sufficient for providing a user with complete access to the > group. Opening this device file provides what we'll call the "group > fd". The group fd is restricted to only work with a single mm context. > Concurrent opens will be denied if the opening process mm does not > match. The group fd will provide interfaces for enumerating the devices > in the group, returning a file descriptor for each device in the group > (the "device fd"), binding groups together, and returning a file > descriptor for iommu operations (the "iommu fd"). > > A group is "viable" when all member devices of the group are bound to > the vfio driver. Until that point, the group fd only allows enumeration > interfaces (ie. listing of group devices). I'm currently thinking > enumeration will be done by a simple read() on the device file returning > a list of dev_name()s. Ok. Are you envisaging this interface as a virtual file, or as a stream? That is, can you seek around the list of devices like a regular file - in which case, what are the precise semantics when the list is changed by a bind - or is there no meaningful notion of file pointer and read() just gives you the next device - in which case how to you rewind to enumerate the group again. > Once the group is viable, the user may bind the > group to another group, retrieve the iommu fd, or retrieve device fds. > Internally, each of these operations will result in an iommu domain > being allocated and all of the devices attached to the domain. > > The purpose of binding groups is to share the iommu domain. Groups > making use of incompatible iommu domains will fail to bind. Groups > making use of different mm's will fail to bind. The vfio driver may > reject some binding based on domain capabilities, but final veto power > is left to the iommu driver[1]. If a user makes use of a group > independently and later wishes to bind it to another group, all the > device fds and the iommu fd must first be closed. This prevents using a > stale iommu fd or accessing devices while the iommu is being switched. > Operations on any group fds of a merged group are performed globally on > the group (ie. enumerating the devices lists all devices in the merged > group, retrieving the iommu fd from any group fd results in the same fd, > device fds from any group can be retrieved from any group fd[2]). > Groups can be merged and unmerged dynamically. Unmerging a group > requires the device fds for the outgoing group are closed. The iommu fd > will remain persistent for the remaining merged group. As I've said I prefer a persistent group model, rather than this transient group model, but it's not a dealbreaker by itself. How are unmerges specified? I'm also assuming that in this model closing a (bound) group fd will unmerge everything down to atomic groups again. > If a device within a group is unbound from the vfio driver while it's in > use (iommu fd refcnt > 0 || device fd recnt > 0), vfio will block the > release and send netlink remove requests for every opened device in the > group (or merged group). Hrm, I do dislike netlink being yet another aspect of an already complex interface. Would it be possible to do kernel->user notifications with a poll()/read() interface on one of the existing fds instead? > If the device fds are not released and > subsequently the iommu fd released as well, vfio will kill the user > process after some delay. Ouch, this seems to me a problematic semantic. Whether the user process survives depends on whether it processes the remove requests fast enough - and a user process could be slowed down by system load or other factors not entirely in its control. I'd be more comfortable with a model where there was a distinction between a "soft" and "hard" remove. The soft would either simply fail, if the device is in use by vfio, or block indefinitely. The hard would kill the user process without delay. This effectively allows your semantics to be implemented in userspace (soft remove, wait, hard remove) - where it's easier to tweak the policy of how long to wait. > At some point in the future we may be able to > adapt this to perform a hard removal and revoke all device access > without killing the user. > > The iommu fd supports dma mapping and unmapping ioctls as well as some, > yet to be defined and possibly architecture specific, iommu description > interfaces. At some point we may also make use of read/write/mmap on > the iommu fd as means to setup dma. Ok. > The device fds will largely support the existing vfio interface, with > generalizations to make it non-pci specific. We'll access mmio/pio/pci > config using segmented offset into the device fd. Interrupts will use > the existing mechanisms (eventfds/irqfd). We'll need to add ioctls to > describe the type of device, number, size, and type of each resource and > available interrupts. > > We still have outstanding questions with how devices are exposed in > qemu, but I think that's largely a qemu-vfio problem and the vfio kernel > interface described here supports all the interesting ways that devices > can be exposed as individuals or sets. I'm currently working on code > changes to support the above and will post as I complete useful chunks. > Thanks, > > Alex > > [1] Implementation note: the current iommu ops makes some of this > awkward. We'll need to temporarily setup a domain for incoming devices > to validate the capabilities of that domain, then tear it down and try > to attach devices to the existing domain. In particular I'm thinking of > the cache coherence capability and whether we remap existing dma > mappings to allow this to change or just reject as incompatible (I'm > leaning to the latter). > > [2] Implementation note: I think a container object makes sense here > where reads/ioctls are passed from the group to the container, which > performs them across all groups making use of that container (there are > no performance critical paths through the group fd). This also implies > the enumeration interface should report groups so we can easily see > which groups are merged. The group fd could simply read as: > group: 1234 > device: 0000:00:19.0 > group: 5678 > device: 0000:01:00.0 > device: 0000:01:00.1 > Some might say this is screaming for xml. Do we need to go there? We > could also do this via the netlink interface. Suggestions welcome. > > _______________________________________________ > Linuxppc-dev mailing list > Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org > https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev > -- David Gibson | I'll have my music baroque, and my code david AT gibson.dropbear.id.au | minimalist, thank you. NOT _the_ _other_ | _way_ _around_! http://www.ozlabs.org/~dgibson ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VFIO v2 design plan 2011-08-30 3:04 ` David Gibson @ 2011-08-30 4:24 ` Alex Williamson 2011-08-30 7:48 ` David Gibson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: Alex Williamson @ 2011-08-30 4:24 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David Gibson Cc: aafabbri, Alexey Kardashevskiy, kvm, Paul Mackerras, Roedel, Joerg, agraf, qemu-devel, chrisw, iommu, Avi Kivity, linux-pci@vger.kernel.org, linuxppc-dev, benve On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 13:04 +1000, David Gibson wrote: > On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 11:05:23AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > > > > I don't think too much has changed since the previous email went out, > > but it seems like a good idea to post a summary in case there were > > suggestions or objections that I missed. > > > > VFIO v2 will rely on the platform iommu driver reporting grouping > > information. Again, a group is a set of devices for which the iommu > > cannot differentiate transactions. An example would be a set of devices > > behind a PCI-to-PCI bridge. All transactions appear to be from the > > bridge itself rather than devices behind the bridge. Platforms are free > > to have whatever constraints they need to for what constitutes a group. > > > > I posted a rough draft of patch to implement that for the base iommu > > driver and VT-d, adding an iommu_device_group callback on iommu ops. > > The iommu base driver also populates an iommu_group sysfs file for each > > device that's part of a group. Members of the same group return the > > same value via either the sysfs or iommu_device_group. The value > > returned is arbitrary, should not be assumed to be persistent across > > boots, and is left to the iommu driver to generate. There are some > > implementation details around how to do this without favoring one bus > > over another, but the interface should be bus/device type agnostic in > > the end. > > > > When the vfio module is loaded, character devices will be created for > > each group in /dev/vfio/$GROUP. Setting file permissions on these files > > should be sufficient for providing a user with complete access to the > > group. Opening this device file provides what we'll call the "group > > fd". The group fd is restricted to only work with a single mm context. > > Concurrent opens will be denied if the opening process mm does not > > match. The group fd will provide interfaces for enumerating the devices > > in the group, returning a file descriptor for each device in the group > > (the "device fd"), binding groups together, and returning a file > > descriptor for iommu operations (the "iommu fd"). > > > > A group is "viable" when all member devices of the group are bound to > > the vfio driver. Until that point, the group fd only allows enumeration > > interfaces (ie. listing of group devices). I'm currently thinking > > enumeration will be done by a simple read() on the device file returning > > a list of dev_name()s. > > Ok. Are you envisaging this interface as a virtual file, or as a > stream? That is, can you seek around the list of devices like a > regular file - in which case, what are the precise semantics when the > list is changed by a bind - or is there no meaningful notion of file > pointer and read() just gives you the next device - in which case how > to you rewind to enumerate the group again. I was implementing it as a virtual file that gets generated on read() (see example in note[2] below). It is a bit clunky as reading it a byte at a time could experience races w/ device add/remove. If it's read all at once, it's an accurate snapshot. Suggestions welcome, this just seemed easier than trying to stuff it into a struct for an ioctl. For a while I thought I could do a VFIO_GROUP_GET_NUM_DEVICES + VFIO_GROUP_GET_DEVICE_INDEX, but that assumes device stability, which I don't think we can guarantee. > > Once the group is viable, the user may bind the > > group to another group, retrieve the iommu fd, or retrieve device fds. > > Internally, each of these operations will result in an iommu domain > > being allocated and all of the devices attached to the domain. > > > > The purpose of binding groups is to share the iommu domain. Groups > > making use of incompatible iommu domains will fail to bind. Groups > > making use of different mm's will fail to bind. The vfio driver may > > reject some binding based on domain capabilities, but final veto power > > is left to the iommu driver[1]. If a user makes use of a group > > independently and later wishes to bind it to another group, all the > > device fds and the iommu fd must first be closed. This prevents using a > > stale iommu fd or accessing devices while the iommu is being switched. > > Operations on any group fds of a merged group are performed globally on > > the group (ie. enumerating the devices lists all devices in the merged > > group, retrieving the iommu fd from any group fd results in the same fd, > > device fds from any group can be retrieved from any group fd[2]). > > Groups can be merged and unmerged dynamically. Unmerging a group > > requires the device fds for the outgoing group are closed. The iommu fd > > will remain persistent for the remaining merged group. > > As I've said I prefer a persistent group model, rather than this > transient group model, but it's not a dealbreaker by itself. How are > unmerges specified? VFIO_GROUP_UNMERGE ioctl taking a group fd parameter. > I'm also assuming that in this model closing a > (bound) group fd will unmerge everything down to atomic groups again. Yes, it will unmerge the closed group down to the atomic group. > > If a device within a group is unbound from the vfio driver while it's in > > use (iommu fd refcnt > 0 || device fd recnt > 0), vfio will block the > > release and send netlink remove requests for every opened device in the > > group (or merged group). > > Hrm, I do dislike netlink being yet another aspect of an already > complex interface. Would it be possible to do kernel->user > notifications with a poll()/read() interface on one of the existing > fds instead? I think it'd have to be a new eventfd, but yes, it would be possible. Then we'd have to figure out if we filter all requests through that (remove, PCI AER, suspend/resume, etc..) or do we use a new fd for each and how we return info for each of those. As much as everyone hates netlink, it still feels like the right interface for these. Beyond unbind, we also need to think about hotplug. If a system had multiple hotplug slots below a P2P bridge and a device was added while the group is in use, what do we do? Maybe we can somehow disable it or mark it for vfio in our bus notifier routines(?). > > If the device fds are not released and > > subsequently the iommu fd released as well, vfio will kill the user > > process after some delay. > > Ouch, this seems to me a problematic semantic. Whether the user > process survives depends on whether it processes the remove requests > fast enough - and a user process could be slowed down by system load > or other factors not entirely in its control. I was assuming "ample" time to process a hot remove, but yes, it's an area of concern. I'm not sure how much of a problem it is in practice though. Yes you can shoot your VM accidentally as root... don't do that. > I'd be more comfortable with a model where there was a distinction > between a "soft" and "hard" remove. The soft would either simply > fail, if the device is in use by vfio, or block indefinitely. The > hard would kill the user process without delay. This effectively > allows your semantics to be implemented in userspace (soft remove, > wait, hard remove) - where it's easier to tweak the policy of how long > to wait. Your first example is essentially what current vfio does now, request remove, wait indefinitely and qemu triggers an abort if the guest doesn't respond. The trouble with moving this policy to userspace is that we're not protecting the host. You won't like this, but we can also use whether the vfio user registers with netlink as a signal of when to do notify-wait-kill, or just kill (yeah, we could do the same with a notification eventfd too). Thanks, Alex > > At some point in the future we may be able to > > adapt this to perform a hard removal and revoke all device access > > without killing the user. > > > > The iommu fd supports dma mapping and unmapping ioctls as well as some, > > yet to be defined and possibly architecture specific, iommu description > > interfaces. At some point we may also make use of read/write/mmap on > > the iommu fd as means to setup dma. > > Ok. > > > The device fds will largely support the existing vfio interface, with > > generalizations to make it non-pci specific. We'll access mmio/pio/pci > > config using segmented offset into the device fd. Interrupts will use > > the existing mechanisms (eventfds/irqfd). We'll need to add ioctls to > > describe the type of device, number, size, and type of each resource and > > available interrupts. > > > > We still have outstanding questions with how devices are exposed in > > qemu, but I think that's largely a qemu-vfio problem and the vfio kernel > > interface described here supports all the interesting ways that devices > > can be exposed as individuals or sets. I'm currently working on code > > changes to support the above and will post as I complete useful chunks. > > Thanks, > > > > Alex > > > > [1] Implementation note: the current iommu ops makes some of this > > awkward. We'll need to temporarily setup a domain for incoming devices > > to validate the capabilities of that domain, then tear it down and try > > to attach devices to the existing domain. In particular I'm thinking of > > the cache coherence capability and whether we remap existing dma > > mappings to allow this to change or just reject as incompatible (I'm > > leaning to the latter). > > > > [2] Implementation note: I think a container object makes sense here > > where reads/ioctls are passed from the group to the container, which > > performs them across all groups making use of that container (there are > > no performance critical paths through the group fd). This also implies > > the enumeration interface should report groups so we can easily see > > which groups are merged. The group fd could simply read as: > > group: 1234 > > device: 0000:00:19.0 > > group: 5678 > > device: 0000:01:00.0 > > device: 0000:01:00.1 > > Some might say this is screaming for xml. Do we need to go there? We > > could also do this via the netlink interface. Suggestions welcome. > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Linuxppc-dev mailing list > > Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org > > https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev > > > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VFIO v2 design plan 2011-08-30 4:24 ` Alex Williamson @ 2011-08-30 7:48 ` David Gibson 2011-08-30 14:51 ` Alex Williamson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: David Gibson @ 2011-08-30 7:48 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alex Williamson Cc: chrisw, Alexey Kardashevskiy, kvm, Paul Mackerras, Roedel, Joerg, agraf, qemu-devel, aafabbri, iommu, Avi Kivity, linux-pci@vger.kernel.org, linuxppc-dev, benve On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 10:24:43PM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 13:04 +1000, David Gibson wrote: > > On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 11:05:23AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > > > > > > I don't think too much has changed since the previous email went out, > > > but it seems like a good idea to post a summary in case there were > > > suggestions or objections that I missed. > > > > > > VFIO v2 will rely on the platform iommu driver reporting grouping > > > information. Again, a group is a set of devices for which the iommu > > > cannot differentiate transactions. An example would be a set of devices > > > behind a PCI-to-PCI bridge. All transactions appear to be from the > > > bridge itself rather than devices behind the bridge. Platforms are free > > > to have whatever constraints they need to for what constitutes a group. > > > > > > I posted a rough draft of patch to implement that for the base iommu > > > driver and VT-d, adding an iommu_device_group callback on iommu ops. > > > The iommu base driver also populates an iommu_group sysfs file for each > > > device that's part of a group. Members of the same group return the > > > same value via either the sysfs or iommu_device_group. The value > > > returned is arbitrary, should not be assumed to be persistent across > > > boots, and is left to the iommu driver to generate. There are some > > > implementation details around how to do this without favoring one bus > > > over another, but the interface should be bus/device type agnostic in > > > the end. > > > > > > When the vfio module is loaded, character devices will be created for > > > each group in /dev/vfio/$GROUP. Setting file permissions on these files > > > should be sufficient for providing a user with complete access to the > > > group. Opening this device file provides what we'll call the "group > > > fd". The group fd is restricted to only work with a single mm context. > > > Concurrent opens will be denied if the opening process mm does not > > > match. The group fd will provide interfaces for enumerating the devices > > > in the group, returning a file descriptor for each device in the group > > > (the "device fd"), binding groups together, and returning a file > > > descriptor for iommu operations (the "iommu fd"). > > > > > > A group is "viable" when all member devices of the group are bound to > > > the vfio driver. Until that point, the group fd only allows enumeration > > > interfaces (ie. listing of group devices). I'm currently thinking > > > enumeration will be done by a simple read() on the device file returning > > > a list of dev_name()s. > > > > Ok. Are you envisaging this interface as a virtual file, or as a > > stream? That is, can you seek around the list of devices like a > > regular file - in which case, what are the precise semantics when the > > list is changed by a bind - or is there no meaningful notion of file > > pointer and read() just gives you the next device - in which case how > > to you rewind to enumerate the group again. > > I was implementing it as a virtual file that gets generated on read() > (see example in note[2] below). It is a bit clunky as reading it a byte > at a time could experience races w/ device add/remove. If it's read all > at once, it's an accurate snapshot. Suggestions welcome, this just > seemed easier than trying to stuff it into a struct for an ioctl. For a > while I thought I could do a VFIO_GROUP_GET_NUM_DEVICES + > VFIO_GROUP_GET_DEVICE_INDEX, but that assumes device stability, which I > don't think we can guarantee. Yeah, that sounds reasonable. > > > Once the group is viable, the user may bind the > > > group to another group, retrieve the iommu fd, or retrieve device fds. > > > Internally, each of these operations will result in an iommu domain > > > being allocated and all of the devices attached to the domain. > > > > > > The purpose of binding groups is to share the iommu domain. Groups > > > making use of incompatible iommu domains will fail to bind. Groups > > > making use of different mm's will fail to bind. The vfio driver may > > > reject some binding based on domain capabilities, but final veto power > > > is left to the iommu driver[1]. If a user makes use of a group > > > independently and later wishes to bind it to another group, all the > > > device fds and the iommu fd must first be closed. This prevents using a > > > stale iommu fd or accessing devices while the iommu is being switched. > > > Operations on any group fds of a merged group are performed globally on > > > the group (ie. enumerating the devices lists all devices in the merged > > > group, retrieving the iommu fd from any group fd results in the same fd, > > > device fds from any group can be retrieved from any group fd[2]). > > > Groups can be merged and unmerged dynamically. Unmerging a group > > > requires the device fds for the outgoing group are closed. The iommu fd > > > will remain persistent for the remaining merged group. > > > > As I've said I prefer a persistent group model, rather than this > > transient group model, but it's not a dealbreaker by itself. How are > > unmerges specified? > > VFIO_GROUP_UNMERGE ioctl taking a group fd parameter. > > > I'm also assuming that in this model closing a > > (bound) group fd will unmerge everything down to atomic groups again. > > Yes, it will unmerge the closed group down to the atomic group. Hrm, not thrilled with the merging semantics, but I can probably live with them. Still some clarifications, though.. If you open a group, merge in a bunch of other groups, then re-open /dev/vfio/NNN for one of the groups mergeed, presumably the new fd must also see the merged group? So presumably you must only unmerge everything when all the fds are closed. If you open groups a and b, then merge a (disjoint) bunch of things into each, then merge b into a, what are the semantics? Wheat about if you then unmerge b from a - does it just remove the atomic group b, or everything you merged into b earlier? Or, what happens if you open group a, merge in some things, then attempt to unmerge a from the merged group? > > > If a device within a group is unbound from the vfio driver while it's in > > > use (iommu fd refcnt > 0 || device fd recnt > 0), vfio will block the > > > release and send netlink remove requests for every opened device in the > > > group (or merged group). > > > > Hrm, I do dislike netlink being yet another aspect of an already > > complex interface. Would it be possible to do kernel->user > > notifications with a poll()/read() interface on one of the existing > > fds instead? > > I think it'd have to be a new eventfd, but yes, it would be possible. > Then we'd have to figure out if we filter all requests through that > (remove, PCI AER, suspend/resume, etc..) or do we use a new fd for each > and how we return info for each of those. Well, I wasn't thinking an eventfd(), precisely so that you can return a custom packet of information with this stuff on read(). > As much as everyone hates > netlink, it still feels like the right interface for these. Well, maybe. > Beyond unbind, we also need to think about hotplug. If a system had > multiple hotplug slots below a P2P bridge and a device was added while > the group is in use, what do we do? Maybe we can somehow disable it or > mark it for vfio in our bus notifier routines(?). That is a very good point. It actually brings into focus a niggling concern I had about this model where the group becomes vfio usable once all the devices in it are bound to vfio. Because of the possibility of hotplug, I think its conceptually more correct to not treat vfio as just another kernel driver which can bind devices, but a special state that the whole group goes into atomically. So the sequence would be: - Admin asks that a group go into vfio state - kernel (attempts to) unbind kernel drivers from every device in the group - group is marked in vfio/limbo state At this point no kernel drivers may bind to anything in the group, including things that are hotplugged into the group after this initial sequence. > > > If the device fds are not released and > > > subsequently the iommu fd released as well, vfio will kill the user > > > process after some delay. > > > > Ouch, this seems to me a problematic semantic. Whether the user > > process survives depends on whether it processes the remove requests > > fast enough - and a user process could be slowed down by system load > > or other factors not entirely in its control. > > I was assuming "ample" time to process a hot remove, but yes, it's an > area of concern. I'm not sure how much of a problem it is in practice > though. Yes you can shoot your VM accidentally as root... don't do > that. They can, but with this semantic they can't know in advance whether the command is going to kill the VM or not. I can just see a situation where the admin issues a command to remove the device from the guest, and usually that goes through the hot guest unplug mechanisms, the guest keeps running and everything is happy. Then one time they issue *exactly the same command* and the VM dies, because the system is running really slow for some reason (huge load, or maybe someone switched the VM into full emulation for debugging). > > I'd be more comfortable with a model where there was a distinction > > between a "soft" and "hard" remove. The soft would either simply > > fail, if the device is in use by vfio, or block indefinitely. The > > hard would kill the user process without delay. This effectively > > allows your semantics to be implemented in userspace (soft remove, > > wait, hard remove) - where it's easier to tweak the policy of how long > > to wait. > > Your first example is essentially what current vfio does now, request > remove, wait indefinitely and qemu triggers an abort if the guest > doesn't respond. The trouble with moving this policy to userspace is > that we're not protecting the host. How is the host not protected? Bear in mind that when I say "userspace" I'm not thinking qemu, I'm thinking the admin equipped with whatever tools he uses for moving devices between guests. So they go: - Please remove this group from the guest - Waits for an amount of time of their choice - Decide, crap, the guest is broken - Hard remove the group from the guest, killing the guest It's basic in perfect analogy to the old: - kill -15 - *drum fingers* - Damn, it's stuck - kill -9 > You won't like this, but we can > also use whether the vfio user registers with netlink as a signal of > when to do notify-wait-kill, or just kill (yeah, we could do the same > with a notification eventfd too). Thanks, -- David Gibson | I'll have my music baroque, and my code david AT gibson.dropbear.id.au | minimalist, thank you. NOT _the_ _other_ | _way_ _around_! http://www.ozlabs.org/~dgibson ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VFIO v2 design plan 2011-08-30 7:48 ` David Gibson @ 2011-08-30 14:51 ` Alex Williamson 2011-09-01 4:10 ` David Gibson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: Alex Williamson @ 2011-08-30 14:51 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David Gibson Cc: chrisw, Alexey Kardashevskiy, kvm, Paul Mackerras, Roedel, Joerg, agraf, qemu-devel, aafabbri, iommu, Avi Kivity, linux-pci@vger.kernel.org, linuxppc-dev, benve On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 17:48 +1000, David Gibson wrote: > On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 10:24:43PM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > > On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 13:04 +1000, David Gibson wrote: > > > On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 11:05:23AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > > > > > > > > I don't think too much has changed since the previous email went out, > > > > but it seems like a good idea to post a summary in case there were > > > > suggestions or objections that I missed. > > > > > > > > VFIO v2 will rely on the platform iommu driver reporting grouping > > > > information. Again, a group is a set of devices for which the iommu > > > > cannot differentiate transactions. An example would be a set of devices > > > > behind a PCI-to-PCI bridge. All transactions appear to be from the > > > > bridge itself rather than devices behind the bridge. Platforms are free > > > > to have whatever constraints they need to for what constitutes a group. > > > > > > > > I posted a rough draft of patch to implement that for the base iommu > > > > driver and VT-d, adding an iommu_device_group callback on iommu ops. > > > > The iommu base driver also populates an iommu_group sysfs file for each > > > > device that's part of a group. Members of the same group return the > > > > same value via either the sysfs or iommu_device_group. The value > > > > returned is arbitrary, should not be assumed to be persistent across > > > > boots, and is left to the iommu driver to generate. There are some > > > > implementation details around how to do this without favoring one bus > > > > over another, but the interface should be bus/device type agnostic in > > > > the end. > > > > > > > > When the vfio module is loaded, character devices will be created for > > > > each group in /dev/vfio/$GROUP. Setting file permissions on these files > > > > should be sufficient for providing a user with complete access to the > > > > group. Opening this device file provides what we'll call the "group > > > > fd". The group fd is restricted to only work with a single mm context. > > > > Concurrent opens will be denied if the opening process mm does not > > > > match. The group fd will provide interfaces for enumerating the devices > > > > in the group, returning a file descriptor for each device in the group > > > > (the "device fd"), binding groups together, and returning a file > > > > descriptor for iommu operations (the "iommu fd"). > > > > > > > > A group is "viable" when all member devices of the group are bound to > > > > the vfio driver. Until that point, the group fd only allows enumeration > > > > interfaces (ie. listing of group devices). I'm currently thinking > > > > enumeration will be done by a simple read() on the device file returning > > > > a list of dev_name()s. > > > > > > Ok. Are you envisaging this interface as a virtual file, or as a > > > stream? That is, can you seek around the list of devices like a > > > regular file - in which case, what are the precise semantics when the > > > list is changed by a bind - or is there no meaningful notion of file > > > pointer and read() just gives you the next device - in which case how > > > to you rewind to enumerate the group again. > > > > I was implementing it as a virtual file that gets generated on read() > > (see example in note[2] below). It is a bit clunky as reading it a byte > > at a time could experience races w/ device add/remove. If it's read all > > at once, it's an accurate snapshot. Suggestions welcome, this just > > seemed easier than trying to stuff it into a struct for an ioctl. For a > > while I thought I could do a VFIO_GROUP_GET_NUM_DEVICES + > > VFIO_GROUP_GET_DEVICE_INDEX, but that assumes device stability, which I > > don't think we can guarantee. > > Yeah, that sounds reasonable. > > > > > Once the group is viable, the user may bind the > > > > group to another group, retrieve the iommu fd, or retrieve device fds. > > > > Internally, each of these operations will result in an iommu domain > > > > being allocated and all of the devices attached to the domain. > > > > > > > > The purpose of binding groups is to share the iommu domain. Groups > > > > making use of incompatible iommu domains will fail to bind. Groups > > > > making use of different mm's will fail to bind. The vfio driver may > > > > reject some binding based on domain capabilities, but final veto power > > > > is left to the iommu driver[1]. If a user makes use of a group > > > > independently and later wishes to bind it to another group, all the > > > > device fds and the iommu fd must first be closed. This prevents using a > > > > stale iommu fd or accessing devices while the iommu is being switched. > > > > Operations on any group fds of a merged group are performed globally on > > > > the group (ie. enumerating the devices lists all devices in the merged > > > > group, retrieving the iommu fd from any group fd results in the same fd, > > > > device fds from any group can be retrieved from any group fd[2]). > > > > Groups can be merged and unmerged dynamically. Unmerging a group > > > > requires the device fds for the outgoing group are closed. The iommu fd > > > > will remain persistent for the remaining merged group. > > > > > > As I've said I prefer a persistent group model, rather than this > > > transient group model, but it's not a dealbreaker by itself. How are > > > unmerges specified? > > > > VFIO_GROUP_UNMERGE ioctl taking a group fd parameter. > > > > > I'm also assuming that in this model closing a > > > (bound) group fd will unmerge everything down to atomic groups again. > > > > Yes, it will unmerge the closed group down to the atomic group. > > Hrm, not thrilled with the merging semantics, but I can probably live > with them. Still some clarifications, though.. > > If you open a group, merge in a bunch of other groups, then re-open > /dev/vfio/NNN for one of the groups mergeed, presumably the new fd > must also see the merged group? So presumably you must only unmerge > everything when all the fds are closed. The device fds for the group to be unmerged must be closed before an unmerge. The iommu fd is tricky. The iommu fd is really the iommu for the merged group, not the individual groups, so it's context stays with the remaining group. Therefore I don't enforce a refcnt on the iommu fd. The usage model I expect is that if a merge works, the user will probably use a single iommu fd for the whole merged group. Maybe that should be enforced? > If you open groups a and b, then merge a (disjoint) bunch of things > into each, then merge b into a, what are the semantics? Wheat about > if you then unmerge b from a - does it just remove the atomic group b, > or everything you merged into b earlier? Or, what happens if you open > group a, merge in some things, then attempt to unmerge a from the > merged group? Simple, don't allow merging and unmerging of merged groups. Merge and unmerge only work on singleton groups. The last case we must support. In that case you just use: ioctl(a.fd, VFIO_GROUP_MERGE, b.fd) ioctl(b.fd, VFIO_GROUP_UNMERGE, a.fd) The groups are peers when merged, so b can remove a as easily as a can remove b. Group b is left with any iommu context setup while merged. > > > > If a device within a group is unbound from the vfio driver while it's in > > > > use (iommu fd refcnt > 0 || device fd recnt > 0), vfio will block the > > > > release and send netlink remove requests for every opened device in the > > > > group (or merged group). > > > > > > Hrm, I do dislike netlink being yet another aspect of an already > > > complex interface. Would it be possible to do kernel->user > > > notifications with a poll()/read() interface on one of the existing > > > fds instead? > > > > I think it'd have to be a new eventfd, but yes, it would be possible. > > Then we'd have to figure out if we filter all requests through that > > (remove, PCI AER, suspend/resume, etc..) or do we use a new fd for each > > and how we return info for each of those. > > Well, I wasn't thinking an eventfd(), precisely so that you can return > a custom packet of information with this stuff on read(). > > > As much as everyone hates > > netlink, it still feels like the right interface for these. > > Well, maybe. > > > Beyond unbind, we also need to think about hotplug. If a system had > > multiple hotplug slots below a P2P bridge and a device was added while > > the group is in use, what do we do? Maybe we can somehow disable it or > > mark it for vfio in our bus notifier routines(?). > > That is a very good point. It actually brings into focus a niggling > concern I had about this model where the group becomes vfio usable > once all the devices in it are bound to vfio. Because of the > possibility of hotplug, I think its conceptually more correct to not > treat vfio as just another kernel driver which can bind devices, but a > special state that the whole group goes into atomically. So the > sequence would be: > - Admin asks that a group go into vfio state > - kernel (attempts to) unbind kernel drivers from every device > in the group > - group is marked in vfio/limbo state > > At this point no kernel drivers may bind to anything in the group, > including things that are hotplugged into the group after this initial > sequence. It seems like this is a mode that could only be accessible if the group is opened w/ admin capabilities, I don't think we'd want to let the vfio group chrdev owner be able to do that automatically. I don't know of any other drivers that behave like this, being able to unbind running drivers and pull devices into itself. > > > > If the device fds are not released and > > > > subsequently the iommu fd released as well, vfio will kill the user > > > > process after some delay. > > > > > > Ouch, this seems to me a problematic semantic. Whether the user > > > process survives depends on whether it processes the remove requests > > > fast enough - and a user process could be slowed down by system load > > > or other factors not entirely in its control. > > > > I was assuming "ample" time to process a hot remove, but yes, it's an > > area of concern. I'm not sure how much of a problem it is in practice > > though. Yes you can shoot your VM accidentally as root... don't do > > that. > > They can, but with this semantic they can't know in advance whether > the command is going to kill the VM or not. I can just see a > situation where the admin issues a command to remove the device from > the guest, and usually that goes through the hot guest unplug > mechanisms, the guest keeps running and everything is happy. Then one > time they issue *exactly the same command* and the VM dies, because > the system is running really slow for some reason (huge load, or maybe > someone switched the VM into full emulation for debugging). Not sure how to handle this other than leave a trail of bread crumbs. > > > I'd be more comfortable with a model where there was a distinction > > > between a "soft" and "hard" remove. The soft would either simply > > > fail, if the device is in use by vfio, or block indefinitely. The > > > hard would kill the user process without delay. This effectively > > > allows your semantics to be implemented in userspace (soft remove, > > > wait, hard remove) - where it's easier to tweak the policy of how long > > > to wait. > > > > Your first example is essentially what current vfio does now, request > > remove, wait indefinitely and qemu triggers an abort if the guest > > doesn't respond. The trouble with moving this policy to userspace is > > that we're not protecting the host. > > How is the host not protected? Bear in mind that when I say > "userspace" I'm not thinking qemu, I'm thinking the admin equipped > with whatever tools he uses for moving devices between guests. So > they go: > - Please remove this group from the guest > - Waits for an amount of time of their choice > - Decide, crap, the guest is broken > - Hard remove the group from the guest, killing the guest > > It's basic in perfect analogy to the old: > - kill -15 > - *drum fingers* > - Damn, it's stuck > - kill -9 And what if the remove is initiated by a hardware admin that walks over to the system, and presses the PCI device hot unplug doorbell? It just looks like a driver hang. Thanks, Alex ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VFIO v2 design plan 2011-08-30 14:51 ` Alex Williamson @ 2011-09-01 4:10 ` David Gibson 2011-09-01 20:27 ` Alex Williamson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: David Gibson @ 2011-09-01 4:10 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alex Williamson Cc: aafabbri, Alexey Kardashevskiy, kvm, Paul Mackerras, Roedel, Joerg, agraf, qemu-devel, chrisw, iommu, Avi Kivity, linux-pci@vger.kernel.org, linuxppc-dev, benve On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 08:51:38AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 17:48 +1000, David Gibson wrote: > > On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 10:24:43PM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > > > On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 13:04 +1000, David Gibson wrote: > > > > On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 11:05:23AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: [snip] > > > > > Once the group is viable, the user may bind the > > > > > group to another group, retrieve the iommu fd, or retrieve device fds. > > > > > Internally, each of these operations will result in an iommu domain > > > > > being allocated and all of the devices attached to the domain. > > > > > > > > > > The purpose of binding groups is to share the iommu domain. Groups > > > > > making use of incompatible iommu domains will fail to bind. Groups > > > > > making use of different mm's will fail to bind. The vfio driver may > > > > > reject some binding based on domain capabilities, but final veto power > > > > > is left to the iommu driver[1]. If a user makes use of a group > > > > > independently and later wishes to bind it to another group, all the > > > > > device fds and the iommu fd must first be closed. This prevents using a > > > > > stale iommu fd or accessing devices while the iommu is being switched. > > > > > Operations on any group fds of a merged group are performed globally on > > > > > the group (ie. enumerating the devices lists all devices in the merged > > > > > group, retrieving the iommu fd from any group fd results in the same fd, > > > > > device fds from any group can be retrieved from any group fd[2]). > > > > > Groups can be merged and unmerged dynamically. Unmerging a group > > > > > requires the device fds for the outgoing group are closed. The iommu fd > > > > > will remain persistent for the remaining merged group. > > > > > > > > As I've said I prefer a persistent group model, rather than this > > > > transient group model, but it's not a dealbreaker by itself. How are > > > > unmerges specified? > > > > > > VFIO_GROUP_UNMERGE ioctl taking a group fd parameter. > > > > > > > I'm also assuming that in this model closing a > > > > (bound) group fd will unmerge everything down to atomic groups again. > > > > > > Yes, it will unmerge the closed group down to the atomic group. > > > > Hrm, not thrilled with the merging semantics, but I can probably live > > with them. Still some clarifications, though.. > > > > If you open a group, merge in a bunch of other groups, then re-open > > /dev/vfio/NNN for one of the groups mergeed, presumably the new fd > > must also see the merged group? So presumably you must only unmerge > > everything when all the fds are closed. > > The device fds for the group to be unmerged must be closed before an > unmerge. The iommu fd is tricky. The iommu fd is really the iommu for > the merged group, not the individual groups, so it's context stays with > the remaining group. Therefore I don't enforce a refcnt on the iommu > fd. The usage model I expect is that if a merge works, the user will > probably use a single iommu fd for the whole merged group. Maybe that > should be enforced? I thought I recalled you saying earlier that the iommu fd could not be open when merging new groups in. I would expect that also to be true when unmerging in that case. > > If you open groups a and b, then merge a (disjoint) bunch of things > > into each, then merge b into a, what are the semantics? Wheat about > > if you then unmerge b from a - does it just remove the atomic group b, > > or everything you merged into b earlier? Or, what happens if you open > > group a, merge in some things, then attempt to unmerge a from the > > merged group? > > Simple, don't allow merging and unmerging of merged groups. Merge and > unmerge only work on singleton groups. Ok, in that case I think we should call it "add" and "remove" rather than merge and unmerge. > The last case we must support. > In that case you just use: > > ioctl(a.fd, VFIO_GROUP_MERGE, b.fd) > ioctl(b.fd, VFIO_GROUP_UNMERGE, a.fd) > > The groups are peers when merged, so b can remove a as easily as a can > remove b. Group b is left with any iommu context setup while > merged. Um *goes cross-eyed*. So, if you open (atomic) groups a and b, then add group b to a, are the two open fds now functionally identical? And likewise if you then open either a or b again straight from from /dev/vfio? Except, that the b fd must then retain the fact that it was originally for atomic group (b), so that it can be used as a handle for an unmerge/remove. The more I dig into the details of these semantics the more I dislike them. [snip] > > > Beyond unbind, we also need to think about hotplug. If a system had > > > multiple hotplug slots below a P2P bridge and a device was added while > > > the group is in use, what do we do? Maybe we can somehow disable it or > > > mark it for vfio in our bus notifier routines(?). > > > > That is a very good point. It actually brings into focus a niggling > > concern I had about this model where the group becomes vfio usable > > once all the devices in it are bound to vfio. Because of the > > possibility of hotplug, I think its conceptually more correct to not > > treat vfio as just another kernel driver which can bind devices, but a > > special state that the whole group goes into atomically. So the > > sequence would be: > > - Admin asks that a group go into vfio state > > - kernel (attempts to) unbind kernel drivers from every device > > in the group > > - group is marked in vfio/limbo state > > > > At this point no kernel drivers may bind to anything in the group, > > including things that are hotplugged into the group after this initial > > sequence. > > It seems like this is a mode that could only be accessible if the group > is opened w/ admin capabilities, I don't think we'd want to let the vfio > group chrdev owner be able to do that automatically. They have to do something that's just as restrictive automatically. If new devices enter an atomic group that's in use by a guest, the kernel must not bind drivers to them. I'm just trying to make the semantics clearer, than proxying the restrictions by binding a dummy driver to everything. > I don't know of > any other drivers that behave like this, being able to unbind running > drivers and pull devices into itself. Well, it's not a driver behaving like this, it's an explicit admin operation to unbind all drivers from the whole group and put it in a state that's suitable for vfio assignment. > > > > > If the device fds are not released and > > > > > subsequently the iommu fd released as well, vfio will kill the user > > > > > process after some delay. > > > > > > > > Ouch, this seems to me a problematic semantic. Whether the user > > > > process survives depends on whether it processes the remove requests > > > > fast enough - and a user process could be slowed down by system load > > > > or other factors not entirely in its control. > > > > > > I was assuming "ample" time to process a hot remove, but yes, it's an > > > area of concern. I'm not sure how much of a problem it is in practice > > > though. Yes you can shoot your VM accidentally as root... don't do > > > that. > > > > They can, but with this semantic they can't know in advance whether > > the command is going to kill the VM or not. I can just see a > > situation where the admin issues a command to remove the device from > > the guest, and usually that goes through the hot guest unplug > > mechanisms, the guest keeps running and everything is happy. Then one > > time they issue *exactly the same command* and the VM dies, because > > the system is running really slow for some reason (huge load, or maybe > > someone switched the VM into full emulation for debugging). > > Not sure how to handle this other than leave a trail of bread crumbs. I have no idea what you mean by that. > > > > I'd be more comfortable with a model where there was a distinction > > > > between a "soft" and "hard" remove. The soft would either simply > > > > fail, if the device is in use by vfio, or block indefinitely. The > > > > hard would kill the user process without delay. This effectively > > > > allows your semantics to be implemented in userspace (soft remove, > > > > wait, hard remove) - where it's easier to tweak the policy of how long > > > > to wait. > > > > > > Your first example is essentially what current vfio does now, request > > > remove, wait indefinitely and qemu triggers an abort if the guest > > > doesn't respond. The trouble with moving this policy to userspace is > > > that we're not protecting the host. > > > > How is the host not protected? Bear in mind that when I say > > "userspace" I'm not thinking qemu, I'm thinking the admin equipped > > with whatever tools he uses for moving devices between guests. So > > they go: > > - Please remove this group from the guest > > - Waits for an amount of time of their choice > > - Decide, crap, the guest is broken > > - Hard remove the group from the guest, killing the guest > > > > It's basic in perfect analogy to the old: > > - kill -15 > > - *drum fingers* > > - Damn, it's stuck > > - kill -9 > > And what if the remove is initiated by a hardware admin that walks over > to the system, and presses the PCI device hot unplug doorbell? It just > looks like a driver hang. Thanks, Hm, true. How is this case handled on the host side? -- David Gibson | I'll have my music baroque, and my code david AT gibson.dropbear.id.au | minimalist, thank you. NOT _the_ _other_ | _way_ _around_! http://www.ozlabs.org/~dgibson ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VFIO v2 design plan 2011-09-01 4:10 ` David Gibson @ 2011-09-01 20:27 ` Alex Williamson 2011-09-02 5:07 ` David Gibson 0 siblings, 1 reply; 8+ messages in thread From: Alex Williamson @ 2011-09-01 20:27 UTC (permalink / raw) To: David Gibson Cc: aafabbri, Alexey Kardashevskiy, kvm, Paul Mackerras, Roedel, Joerg, agraf, qemu-devel, chrisw, iommu, Avi Kivity, linux-pci@vger.kernel.org, linuxppc-dev, benve On Thu, 2011-09-01 at 14:10 +1000, David Gibson wrote: > On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 08:51:38AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > > On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 17:48 +1000, David Gibson wrote: > > > On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 10:24:43PM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > > > > On Tue, 2011-08-30 at 13:04 +1000, David Gibson wrote: > > > > > On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 11:05:23AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > [snip] > > > > > > Once the group is viable, the user may bind the > > > > > > group to another group, retrieve the iommu fd, or retrieve device fds. > > > > > > Internally, each of these operations will result in an iommu domain > > > > > > being allocated and all of the devices attached to the domain. > > > > > > > > > > > > The purpose of binding groups is to share the iommu domain. Groups > > > > > > making use of incompatible iommu domains will fail to bind. Groups > > > > > > making use of different mm's will fail to bind. The vfio driver may > > > > > > reject some binding based on domain capabilities, but final veto power > > > > > > is left to the iommu driver[1]. If a user makes use of a group > > > > > > independently and later wishes to bind it to another group, all the > > > > > > device fds and the iommu fd must first be closed. This prevents using a > > > > > > stale iommu fd or accessing devices while the iommu is being switched. > > > > > > Operations on any group fds of a merged group are performed globally on > > > > > > the group (ie. enumerating the devices lists all devices in the merged > > > > > > group, retrieving the iommu fd from any group fd results in the same fd, > > > > > > device fds from any group can be retrieved from any group fd[2]). > > > > > > Groups can be merged and unmerged dynamically. Unmerging a group > > > > > > requires the device fds for the outgoing group are closed. The iommu fd > > > > > > will remain persistent for the remaining merged group. > > > > > > > > > > As I've said I prefer a persistent group model, rather than this > > > > > transient group model, but it's not a dealbreaker by itself. How are > > > > > unmerges specified? > > > > > > > > VFIO_GROUP_UNMERGE ioctl taking a group fd parameter. > > > > > > > > > I'm also assuming that in this model closing a > > > > > (bound) group fd will unmerge everything down to atomic groups again. > > > > > > > > Yes, it will unmerge the closed group down to the atomic group. > > > > > > Hrm, not thrilled with the merging semantics, but I can probably live > > > with them. Still some clarifications, though.. > > > > > > If you open a group, merge in a bunch of other groups, then re-open > > > /dev/vfio/NNN for one of the groups mergeed, presumably the new fd > > > must also see the merged group? So presumably you must only unmerge > > > everything when all the fds are closed. > > > > The device fds for the group to be unmerged must be closed before an > > unmerge. The iommu fd is tricky. The iommu fd is really the iommu for > > the merged group, not the individual groups, so it's context stays with > > the remaining group. Therefore I don't enforce a refcnt on the iommu > > fd. The usage model I expect is that if a merge works, the user will > > probably use a single iommu fd for the whole merged group. Maybe that > > should be enforced? > > I thought I recalled you saying earlier that the iommu fd could not be > open when merging new groups in. I would expect that also to be true > when unmerging in that case. We have to support hotplug. The group-to-be-merged can't be in use (no open device or iommu fds). To unmerge a group, we only require that no device fds are in use as the merged-group-iommu may still be in use by the remaining members. > > > If you open groups a and b, then merge a (disjoint) bunch of things > > > into each, then merge b into a, what are the semantics? Wheat about > > > if you then unmerge b from a - does it just remove the atomic group b, > > > or everything you merged into b earlier? Or, what happens if you open > > > group a, merge in some things, then attempt to unmerge a from the > > > merged group? > > > > Simple, don't allow merging and unmerging of merged groups. Merge and > > unmerge only work on singleton groups. > > Ok, in that case I think we should call it "add" and "remove" rather > than merge and unmerge. > > > The last case we must support. > > In that case you just use: > > > > ioctl(a.fd, VFIO_GROUP_MERGE, b.fd) > > ioctl(b.fd, VFIO_GROUP_UNMERGE, a.fd) > > > > The groups are peers when merged, so b can remove a as easily as a can > > remove b. Group b is left with any iommu context setup while > > merged. > > Um *goes cross-eyed*. So, if you open (atomic) groups a and b, then > add group b to a, are the two open fds now functionally identical? Yes. > And likewise if you then open either a or b again straight from from > /dev/vfio? Yes. > Except, that the b fd must then retain the fact that it was originally > for atomic group (b), so that it can be used as a handle for an > unmerge/remove. Right. > The more I dig into the details of these semantics the more I dislike > them. Suggest something better. I spent half a day thinking about what vfio would look like in configfs, it has some very appealing aspects, but since it doesn't support ioctls we'd still have a chardev interface and it gets ugly again. > [snip] > > > > Beyond unbind, we also need to think about hotplug. If a system had > > > > multiple hotplug slots below a P2P bridge and a device was added while > > > > the group is in use, what do we do? Maybe we can somehow disable it or > > > > mark it for vfio in our bus notifier routines(?). > > > > > > That is a very good point. It actually brings into focus a niggling > > > concern I had about this model where the group becomes vfio usable > > > once all the devices in it are bound to vfio. Because of the > > > possibility of hotplug, I think its conceptually more correct to not > > > treat vfio as just another kernel driver which can bind devices, but a > > > special state that the whole group goes into atomically. So the > > > sequence would be: > > > - Admin asks that a group go into vfio state > > > - kernel (attempts to) unbind kernel drivers from every device > > > in the group > > > - group is marked in vfio/limbo state > > > > > > At this point no kernel drivers may bind to anything in the group, > > > including things that are hotplugged into the group after this initial > > > sequence. > > > > It seems like this is a mode that could only be accessible if the group > > is opened w/ admin capabilities, I don't think we'd want to let the vfio > > group chrdev owner be able to do that automatically. > > They have to do something that's just as restrictive automatically. > If new devices enter an atomic group that's in use by a guest, the > kernel must not bind drivers to them. I'm just trying to make the > semantics clearer, than proxying the restrictions by binding a dummy > driver to everything. > > > I don't know of > > any other drivers that behave like this, being able to unbind running > > drivers and pull devices into itself. > > Well, it's not a driver behaving like this, it's an explicit admin > operation to unbind all drivers from the whole group and put it in a > state that's suitable for vfio assignment. > > > > > > > If the device fds are not released and > > > > > > subsequently the iommu fd released as well, vfio will kill the user > > > > > > process after some delay. > > > > > > > > > > Ouch, this seems to me a problematic semantic. Whether the user > > > > > process survives depends on whether it processes the remove requests > > > > > fast enough - and a user process could be slowed down by system load > > > > > or other factors not entirely in its control. > > > > > > > > I was assuming "ample" time to process a hot remove, but yes, it's an > > > > area of concern. I'm not sure how much of a problem it is in practice > > > > though. Yes you can shoot your VM accidentally as root... don't do > > > > that. > > > > > > They can, but with this semantic they can't know in advance whether > > > the command is going to kill the VM or not. I can just see a > > > situation where the admin issues a command to remove the device from > > > the guest, and usually that goes through the hot guest unplug > > > mechanisms, the guest keeps running and everything is happy. Then one > > > time they issue *exactly the same command* and the VM dies, because > > > the system is running really slow for some reason (huge load, or maybe > > > someone switched the VM into full emulation for debugging). > > > > Not sure how to handle this other than leave a trail of bread crumbs. > > I have no idea what you mean by that. printk(KERN_WARNING "vfio: killing processes %d (%s) to release device %s.\n", ...) > > > > > I'd be more comfortable with a model where there was a distinction > > > > > between a "soft" and "hard" remove. The soft would either simply > > > > > fail, if the device is in use by vfio, or block indefinitely. The > > > > > hard would kill the user process without delay. This effectively > > > > > allows your semantics to be implemented in userspace (soft remove, > > > > > wait, hard remove) - where it's easier to tweak the policy of how long > > > > > to wait. > > > > > > > > Your first example is essentially what current vfio does now, request > > > > remove, wait indefinitely and qemu triggers an abort if the guest > > > > doesn't respond. The trouble with moving this policy to userspace is > > > > that we're not protecting the host. > > > > > > How is the host not protected? Bear in mind that when I say > > > "userspace" I'm not thinking qemu, I'm thinking the admin equipped > > > with whatever tools he uses for moving devices between guests. So > > > they go: > > > - Please remove this group from the guest > > > - Waits for an amount of time of their choice > > > - Decide, crap, the guest is broken > > > - Hard remove the group from the guest, killing the guest > > > > > > It's basic in perfect analogy to the old: > > > - kill -15 > > > - *drum fingers* > > > - Damn, it's stuck > > > - kill -9 > > > > And what if the remove is initiated by a hardware admin that walks over > > to the system, and presses the PCI device hot unplug doorbell? It just > > looks like a driver hang. Thanks, > > Hm, true. How is this case handled on the host side? Same as if you attempt to unbind the device from the driver, release callback, iirc. Thanks, Alex ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
* Re: [Qemu-devel] VFIO v2 design plan 2011-09-01 20:27 ` Alex Williamson @ 2011-09-02 5:07 ` David Gibson 0 siblings, 0 replies; 8+ messages in thread From: David Gibson @ 2011-09-02 5:07 UTC (permalink / raw) To: Alex Williamson Cc: chrisw, Alexey Kardashevskiy, kvm, Paul Mackerras, Roedel, Joerg, agraf, qemu-devel, aafabbri, iommu, Avi Kivity, linux-pci@vger.kernel.org, linuxppc-dev, benve On Thu, Sep 01, 2011 at 02:27:00PM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > On Thu, 2011-09-01 at 14:10 +1000, David Gibson wrote: > > On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 08:51:38AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: [snip] > > > > If you open a group, merge in a bunch of other groups, then re-open > > > > /dev/vfio/NNN for one of the groups mergeed, presumably the new fd > > > > must also see the merged group? So presumably you must only unmerge > > > > everything when all the fds are closed. > > > > > > The device fds for the group to be unmerged must be closed before an > > > unmerge. The iommu fd is tricky. The iommu fd is really the iommu for > > > the merged group, not the individual groups, so it's context stays with > > > the remaining group. Therefore I don't enforce a refcnt on the iommu > > > fd. The usage model I expect is that if a merge works, the user will > > > probably use a single iommu fd for the whole merged group. Maybe that > > > should be enforced? > > > > I thought I recalled you saying earlier that the iommu fd could not be > > open when merging new groups in. I would expect that also to be true > > when unmerging in that case. > > We have to support hotplug. The group-to-be-merged can't be in use (no > open device or iommu fds). To unmerge a group, we only require that no > device fds are in use as the merged-group-iommu may still be in use by > the remaining members. I'm not entirely clear how this relates to hotplug. But I guess the crucial point is that the group-to-be-merged may not have open device or iommu fds, but the group-to-be-merged-into can? But couldn't either a merge or an unmerge cause a change in the effective capabilities of the IOMMU? > > > > If you open groups a and b, then merge a (disjoint) bunch of things > > > > into each, then merge b into a, what are the semantics? Wheat about > > > > if you then unmerge b from a - does it just remove the atomic group b, > > > > or everything you merged into b earlier? Or, what happens if you open > > > > group a, merge in some things, then attempt to unmerge a from the > > > > merged group? > > > > > > Simple, don't allow merging and unmerging of merged groups. Merge and > > > unmerge only work on singleton groups. > > > > Ok, in that case I think we should call it "add" and "remove" rather > > than merge and unmerge. > > > > > The last case we must support. > > > In that case you just use: > > > > > > ioctl(a.fd, VFIO_GROUP_MERGE, b.fd) > > > ioctl(b.fd, VFIO_GROUP_UNMERGE, a.fd) > > > > > > The groups are peers when merged, so b can remove a as easily as a can > > > remove b. Group b is left with any iommu context setup while > > > merged. > > > > Um *goes cross-eyed*. So, if you open (atomic) groups a and b, then > > add group b to a, are the two open fds now functionally identical? > > Yes. > > > And likewise if you then open either a or b again straight from from > > /dev/vfio? > > Yes. > > > Except, that the b fd must then retain the fact that it was originally > > for atomic group (b), so that it can be used as a handle for an > > unmerge/remove. > > Right. Ugh. Having the file handle represent the meta-group for most purposes, but also represent (invisibly) an atomic group is just horrible. Especially when - using one of the examples mentioned above, it's actually possible to remove the atomic group represented by an fd from the meta-group it's also representing. > > The more I dig into the details of these semantics the more I dislike > > them. > > Suggest something better. I spent half a day thinking about what vfio > would look like in configfs, it has some very appealing aspects, but > since it doesn't support ioctls we'd still have a chardev interface and > it gets ugly again. Well, again, I prefer a persistent group interface, where the meta-group is not bound to the lifetime of a file handle. Instead you use a different interface to create a meta-group (which has an ID disjoint from the atomic groups), then you can open /dev/vfio/<metagroup-id>. The constituent atomic group devices are still visible, and their enumeration interface works, but are otherwise unusable (like a group which still has kernel drivers bound to some constituent devices). Hrm. In the interests of making forward progress here, can I suggest we implement the other APIs without group-binding/metagrouping for now. It doesn't look as if any of the suggested approaches for this so far are fundamentally incompatible with the rest of the interface. [snip] > > > > > > I'd be more comfortable with a model where there was a distinction > > > > > > between a "soft" and "hard" remove. The soft would either simply > > > > > > fail, if the device is in use by vfio, or block indefinitely. The > > > > > > hard would kill the user process without delay. This effectively > > > > > > allows your semantics to be implemented in userspace (soft remove, > > > > > > wait, hard remove) - where it's easier to tweak the policy of how long > > > > > > to wait. > > > > > > > > > > Your first example is essentially what current vfio does now, request > > > > > remove, wait indefinitely and qemu triggers an abort if the guest > > > > > doesn't respond. The trouble with moving this policy to userspace is > > > > > that we're not protecting the host. > > > > > > > > How is the host not protected? Bear in mind that when I say > > > > "userspace" I'm not thinking qemu, I'm thinking the admin equipped > > > > with whatever tools he uses for moving devices between guests. So > > > > they go: > > > > - Please remove this group from the guest > > > > - Waits for an amount of time of their choice > > > > - Decide, crap, the guest is broken > > > > - Hard remove the group from the guest, killing the guest > > > > > > > > It's basic in perfect analogy to the old: > > > > - kill -15 > > > > - *drum fingers* > > > > - Damn, it's stuck > > > > - kill -9 > > > > > > And what if the remove is initiated by a hardware admin that walks over > > > to the system, and presses the PCI device hot unplug doorbell? It just > > > looks like a driver hang. Thanks, > > > > Hm, true. How is this case handled on the host side? > > Same as if you attempt to unbind the device from the driver, release > callback, iirc. Thanks, Roght, I guess my point is whether there's some kind of userspace notification or not. If there is, then it's reasonable to do a soft unbind, and the userspace callback can do a hard kill after a delay. If not, then it does need to be a hard unbind / kill. -- David Gibson | I'll have my music baroque, and my code david AT gibson.dropbear.id.au | minimalist, thank you. NOT _the_ _other_ | _way_ _around_! http://www.ozlabs.org/~dgibson ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 8+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2011-09-02 5:08 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 8+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2011-08-26 17:05 [Qemu-devel] VFIO v2 design plan Alex Williamson 2011-08-30 3:04 ` David Gibson 2011-08-30 4:24 ` Alex Williamson 2011-08-30 7:48 ` David Gibson 2011-08-30 14:51 ` Alex Williamson 2011-09-01 4:10 ` David Gibson 2011-09-01 20:27 ` Alex Williamson 2011-09-02 5:07 ` David Gibson
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