On Tue, 14 Jul 2020 18:19:46 +0100 "Dr. David Alan Gilbert" <dgilbert@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > * Alex Williamson (alex.williamson@xxxxxxxxxx) wrote: > > On Tue, 14 Jul 2020 11:21:29 +0100 > > Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > On Tue, Jul 14, 2020 at 07:29:57AM +0800, Yan Zhao wrote: > > > > hi folks, > > > > we are defining a device migration compatibility interface that helps upper > > > > layer stack like openstack/ovirt/libvirt to check if two devices are > > > > live migration compatible. > > > > The "devices" here could be MDEVs, physical devices, or hybrid of the two. > > > > e.g. we could use it to check whether > > > > - a src MDEV can migrate to a target MDEV, > > > > - a src VF in SRIOV can migrate to a target VF in SRIOV, > > > > - a src MDEV can migration to a target VF in SRIOV. > > > > (e.g. SIOV/SRIOV backward compatibility case) > > > > > > > > The upper layer stack could use this interface as the last step to check > > > > if one device is able to migrate to another device before triggering a real > > > > live migration procedure. > > > > we are not sure if this interface is of value or help to you. please don't > > > > hesitate to drop your valuable comments. > > > > > > > > > > > > (1) interface definition > > > > The interface is defined in below way: > > > > > > > > __ userspace > > > > /\ \ > > > > / \write > > > > / read \ > > > > ________/__________ ___\|/_____________ > > > > | migration_version | | migration_version |-->check migration > > > > --------------------- --------------------- compatibility > > > > device A device B > > > > > > > > > > > > a device attribute named migration_version is defined under each device's > > > > sysfs node. e.g. (/sys/bus/pci/devices/0000\:00\:02.0/$mdev_UUID/migration_version). > > > > userspace tools read the migration_version as a string from the source device, > > > > and write it to the migration_version sysfs attribute in the target device. > > > > > > > > The userspace should treat ANY of below conditions as two devices not compatible: > > > > - any one of the two devices does not have a migration_version attribute > > > > - error when reading from migration_version attribute of one device > > > > - error when writing migration_version string of one device to > > > > migration_version attribute of the other device > > > > > > > > The string read from migration_version attribute is defined by device vendor > > > > driver and is completely opaque to the userspace. > > > > for a Intel vGPU, string format can be defined like > > > > "parent device PCI ID" + "version of gvt driver" + "mdev type" + "aggregator count". > > > > > > > > for an NVMe VF connecting to a remote storage. it could be > > > > "PCI ID" + "driver version" + "configured remote storage URL" > > > > > > > > for a QAT VF, it may be > > > > "PCI ID" + "driver version" + "supported encryption set". > > > > > > > > (to avoid namespace confliction from each vendor, we may prefix a driver name to > > > > each migration_version string. e.g. i915-v1-8086-591d-i915-GVTg_V5_8-1) > > > > It's very strange to define it as opaque and then proceed to describe > > the contents of that opaque string. The point is that its contents > > are defined by the vendor driver to describe the device, driver version, > > and possibly metadata about the configuration of the device. One > > instance of a device might generate a different string from another. > > The string that a device produces is not necessarily the only string > > the vendor driver will accept, for example the driver might support > > backwards compatible migrations. > > (As I've said in the previous discussion, off one of the patch series) > > My view is it makes sense to have a half-way house on the opaqueness of > this string; I'd expect to have an ID and version that are human > readable, maybe a device ID/name that's human interpretable and then a > bunch of other cruft that maybe device/vendor/version specific. > > I'm thinking that we want to be able to report problems and include the > string and the user to be able to easily identify the device that was > complaining and notice a difference in versions, and perhaps also use > it in compatibility patterns to find compatible hosts; but that does > get tricky when it's a 'ask the device if it's compatible'. In the reply I just sent to Dan, I gave this example of what a "compatibility string" might look like represented as json: { "device_api": "vfio-pci", "vendor": "vendor-driver-name", "version": { "major": 0, "minor": 1 }, "vfio-pci": { // Based on above device_api "vendor": 0x1234, // Values for the exposed device "device": 0x5678, // Possibly further parameters for a more specific match }, "mdev_attrs": [ { "attribute0": "VALUE" } ] } Are you thinking that we might allow the vendor to include a vendor specific array where we'd simply require that both sides have matching fields and values? ie. "vendor_fields": [ { "unknown_field0": "unknown_value0" }, { "unknown_field1": "unknown_value1" }, ] We could certainly make that part of the spec, but I can't really figure the value of it other than to severely restrict compatibility, which the vendor could already do via the version.major value. Maybe they'd want to put a build timestamp, random uuid, or source sha1 into such a field to make absolutely certain compatibility is only determined between identical builds? Thanks, Alex