[PATCH v2 4/4] qemu: assign vfio devices to PCIe addresses when appropriate

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Although nearly all host devices that are assigned to guests using
vfio ("<hostdev>" devices in libvirt) are physically PCI Express
devices, until now libvirt's PCI address assignment has always
assigned them addresses on legacy PCI controllers in the guest, even
if the guest's machinetype has a PCIe root bus (e.g. q35 and
aarch64/virt).

This patch tries to assign them to an address on a PCIe controller
instead, when appropriate. First we do some preliminary checks that
might allow setting the flags without doing any extra work, and if
those conditions aren't met (and if libvirt is running privileged so
that it has proper permissions), we perform the (relatively) time
consuming task of reading the device's PCI config to see if it is an
Express device. If this is successful, the connect flags are set based
on the result, but if we aren't able to read the PCI config (most
likely due to the device not being present on the system at the time
of the check) we assume it is (or will be) an Express device, since
that is almost always the case anyway.
---

Change since V1: implemented ALex's suggestion of checking the length
  of the PCI config file when running unprivileged.

 src/qemu/qemu_domain_address.c | 86 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--
 1 file changed, 83 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)

diff --git a/src/qemu/qemu_domain_address.c b/src/qemu/qemu_domain_address.c
index 8abae65..47b2c7f 100644
--- a/src/qemu/qemu_domain_address.c
+++ b/src/qemu/qemu_domain_address.c
@@ -428,7 +428,7 @@ qemuDomainAssignARMVirtioMMIOAddresses(virDomainDefPtr def,
  */
 static virDomainPCIConnectFlags
 qemuDomainDeviceCalculatePCIConnectFlags(virDomainDeviceDefPtr dev,
-                                         virQEMUDriverPtr driver ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED,
+                                         virQEMUDriverPtr driver,
                                          virDomainPCIConnectFlags pcieFlags,
                                          virDomainPCIConnectFlags virtioFlags)
 {
@@ -558,8 +558,88 @@ qemuDomainDeviceCalculatePCIConnectFlags(virDomainDeviceDefPtr dev,
             return 0;
         }
 
-    case VIR_DOMAIN_DEVICE_HOSTDEV:
-        return pciFlags;
+    case VIR_DOMAIN_DEVICE_HOSTDEV: {
+        virDomainHostdevDefPtr hostdev = dev->data.hostdev;
+
+        if (hostdev->mode == VIR_DOMAIN_HOSTDEV_MODE_SUBSYS &&
+            hostdev->source.subsys.type == VIR_DOMAIN_HOSTDEV_SUBSYS_TYPE_PCI) {
+            bool isExpress = false;
+            virPCIDevicePtr pciDev;
+            virPCIDeviceAddressPtr hostAddr = &hostdev->source.subsys.u.pci.addr;
+
+            if (pciFlags == pcieFlags) {
+                /* This arch/qemu only supports legacy PCI, so there
+                 * is no point in checking if the device is an Express
+                 * device.
+                 */
+                return pciFlags;
+            }
+
+            if (virDeviceInfoPCIAddressPresent(hostdev->info)) {
+                /* A guest-side address has already been assigned, so
+                 * we can avoid reading the PCI config, and just use
+                 * pcieFlags, since the pciConnectFlags checking is
+                 * more relaxed when an address is already assigned
+                 * than it is when we're looking for a new address (so
+                 * validation will pass regardless of whether we set
+                 * the flags to PCI or PCIE).
+                 */
+                return pcieFlags;
+            }
+
+            if (!(pciDev = virPCIDeviceNew(hostAddr->domain,
+                                           hostAddr->bus,
+                                           hostAddr->slot,
+                                           hostAddr->function))) {
+                /* libvirt should be able to perform all the
+                 * operations in virPCIDeviceNew() even if it's
+                 * running unprivileged, so if this fails, the device
+                 * apparently doesn't currently exist on the host.
+                 * Since the overwhelming majority of assignable host
+                 * devices are PCIe, assume this one is too.
+                 */
+                return pcieFlags;
+            }
+
+            if (!driver->privileged) {
+                /* unprivileged libvirtd is unable to read *all* of a
+                 * device's PCI config (it can only read the first 64
+                 * bytes, which isn't enough for the check that's done
+                 * in virPCIDeviceIsPCIExpress()), so instead of
+                 * trying and failing, we make an educated guess based
+                 * on the length of the device's config file - if it
+                 * is 256 bytes, then it is definitely a legacy PCI
+                 * device. If it's larger than that, then it is
+                 * *probably PCIe (although it could be PCI-x, but
+                 * those are extremely rare). If the config file can't
+                 * be found (in which case the "length" will be -1),
+                 * then we blindly assume the most likely outcome -
+                 * PCIe.
+                 */
+                off_t configLen = virFileLength(virPCIDeviceGetConfigPath(pciDev));
+
+                virPCIDeviceFree(pciDev);
+
+                if (configLen == 256)
+                    return pciFlags;
+
+                return pcieFlags;
+            }
+
+            /* If we are running with privileges, we can examine the
+             * PCI config contents with virPCIDeviceIsPCIExpress() for
+             * a definitive answer.
+             */
+            isExpress = virPCIDeviceIsPCIExpress(pciDev);
+            virPCIDeviceFree(pciDev);
+
+            if (isExpress)
+                return pcieFlags;
+
+            return pciFlags;
+        }
+        return 0;
+    }
 
     case VIR_DOMAIN_DEVICE_MEMBALLOON:
         switch ((virDomainMemballoonModel) dev->data.memballoon->model) {
-- 
2.9.3

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