On Fri, 8 Nov 2019 17:05:45 -0400 Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Nov 08, 2019 at 01:34:35PM -0700, Alex Williamson wrote: > > On Fri, 8 Nov 2019 16:12:53 -0400 > > Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > On Fri, Nov 08, 2019 at 11:12:38AM -0800, Jakub Kicinski wrote: > > > > On Fri, 8 Nov 2019 15:40:22 +0000, Parav Pandit wrote: > > > > > > The new intel driver has been having a very similar discussion about how to > > > > > > model their 'multi function device' ie to bind RDMA and other drivers to a > > > > > > shared PCI function, and I think that discussion settled on adding a new bus? > > > > > > > > > > > > Really these things are all very similar, it would be nice to have a clear > > > > > > methodology on how to use the device core if a single PCI device is split by > > > > > > software into multiple different functional units and attached to different > > > > > > driver instances. > > > > > > > > > > > > Currently there is alot of hacking in this area.. And a consistent scheme > > > > > > might resolve the ugliness with the dma_ops wrappers. > > > > > > > > > > > > We already have the 'mfd' stuff to support splitting platform devices, maybe > > > > > > we need to create a 'pci-mfd' to support splitting PCI devices? > > > > > > > > > > > > I'm not really clear how mfd and mdev relate, I always thought mdev was > > > > > > strongly linked to vfio. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Mdev at beginning was strongly linked to vfio, but as I mentioned > > > > > above it is addressing more use case. > > > > > > > > > > I observed that discussion, but was not sure of extending mdev further. > > > > > > > > > > One way to do for Intel drivers to do is after series [9]. > > > > > Where PCI driver says, MDEV_CLASS_ID_I40_FOO > > > > > RDMA driver mdev_register_driver(), matches on it and does the probe(). > > > > > > > > Yup, FWIW to me the benefit of reusing mdevs for the Intel case vs > > > > muddying the purpose of mdevs is not a clear trade off. > > > > > > IMHO, mdev has amdev_parent_ops structure clearly intended to link it > > > to vfio, so using a mdev for something not related to vfio seems like > > > a poor choice. > > > > Unless there's some opposition, I'm intended to queue this for v5.5: > > > > https://www.spinics.net/lists/kvm/msg199613.html > > > > mdev has started out as tied to vfio, but at it's core, it's just a > > device life cycle infrastructure with callbacks between bus drivers > > and vendor devices. If virtio is on the wrong path with the above > > series, please speak up. Thanks, > > Well, I think Greg just objected pretty strongly. > > IMHO it is wrong to turn mdev into some API multiplexor. That is what > the driver core already does and AFAIK your bus type is supposed to > represent your API contract to your drivers. > > Since the bus type is ABI, 'mdev' is really all about vfio I guess? > > Maybe mdev should grow by factoring the special GUID life cycle stuff > into a helper library that can make it simpler to build proper API > specific bus's using that lifecycle model? ie the virtio I saw > proposed should probably be a mdev-virtio bus type providing this new > virtio API contract using a 'struct mdev_virtio'? I see, the bus:API contract is more clear when we're talking about physical buses and physical devices following a hardware specification. But if we take PCI for example, each PCI device has it's own internal API that operates on the bus API. PCI bus drivers match devices based on vendor and device ID, which defines that internal API, not the bus API. The bus API is pretty thin when we're talking virtual devices and virtual buses though. The bus "API" is essentially that lifecycle management, so I'm having a bit of a hard time differentiating this from saying "hey, that PCI bus is nice, but we can't have drivers using their own API on the same bus, so can we move the config space, reset, hotplug, etc, stuff into helpers and come up with an (ex.) mlx5_bus instead?" Essentially for virtual devices, we're dictating a bus per device type, whereas it seemed like a reasonable idea at the time to create a common virtual device bus, but maybe it went into the weeds when trying to figure out how device drivers match to devices on that bus and actually interact with them. > I only looked briefly but mdev seems like an unusual way to use the > driver core. *generally* I would expect that if a driver wants to > provide a foo_device (on a foo bus, providing the foo API contract) it > looks very broadly like: > > struct foo_device { > struct device dev; > const struct foo_ops *ops; > }; > struct my_foo_device { > struct foo_device fdev; > }; > > foo_device_register(&mydev->fdev); > > Which means we can use normal container_of() patterns, while mdev > seems to want to allocate all the structs internally.. I guess this is > because of how the lifecycle stuff works? From a device core view it > looks quite unnatural. Right, there's an attempt in mdev to do the common bits of the device creation in the core and pass it to the vendor driver to fill in the private bits. I'm sure it could be cleaner, patches welcome :) Thanks, Alex