On Tue, 24 Apr 2018 10:40:56 +0200 Pierre Morel <pmorel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 24/04/2018 08:54, Dong Jia Shi wrote: > > * Pierre Morel <pmorel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> [2018-04-19 16:48:04 +0200]: > > > > [...] > > > >> @@ -94,9 +83,15 @@ static void vfio_ccw_sch_io_todo(struct work_struct *work) > >> static void vfio_ccw_sch_irq(struct subchannel *sch) > >> { > >> struct vfio_ccw_private *private = dev_get_drvdata(&sch->dev); > >> + struct irb *irb = this_cpu_ptr(&cio_irb); > >> > >> inc_irq_stat(IRQIO_CIO); > >> - vfio_ccw_fsm_event(private, VFIO_CCW_EVENT_INTERRUPT); > >> + memcpy(&private->irb, irb, sizeof(*irb)); > >> + > >> + WARN_ON(work_pending(&private->io_work)); > > Hmm, why do we need this? > > The current design insure that we have not two concurrent SSCH requests. > How ever I want here to track spurious interrupt. > If we implement cancel, halt or clear requests, we also may trigger (AFAIU) > a second interrupts depending on races between instructions, controller > and device. You won't get an interrupt for a successful cancel. If you do a halt/clear, you will make the subchannel halt/clear pending in addition to start pending and you'll only get one interrupt (if the I/O has progressed far enough, you won't be able to issue a hsch). The interesting case is: - guest does a ssch, we do a ssch on the device - the guest does a csch before it got the interrupt for the ssch - before we do the csch on the device, the subchannel is already status pending with completion of the ssch - after we issue the csch, we get a second interrupt (for the csch) I think we should present two interrupts to the guest in that case. Races between issuing ssch/hsch/csch and the subchannel becoming status pending happen on real hardware as well, we're just more likely to see them with the vfio layer in between. (I'm currently trying to recall what we're doing with unsolicited interrupts. These are fun wrt deferred cc 1; I'm not sure if there are cases where we want to present a deferred cc to the guest.) Also, doing a second ssch before we got final state for the first one is perfectly valid. Linux just does not do it, so I'm not sure if we should invest too much time there. > > We do not need it strongly. > > > > >> + queue_work(vfio_ccw_work_q, &private->io_work); > >> + if (private->completion) > >> + complete(private->completion); > >> } > >> > >> static int vfio_ccw_sch_probe(struct subchannel *sch) > > [...] > > >