Wed, Aug 05, 2020 at 11:33:38AM CEST, yan.y.zhao@xxxxxxxxx wrote: >On Wed, Aug 05, 2020 at 04:02:48PM +0800, Jason Wang wrote: >> >> On 2020/8/5 下午3:56, Jiri Pirko wrote: >> > Wed, Aug 05, 2020 at 04:41:54AM CEST, jasowang@xxxxxxxxxx wrote: >> > > On 2020/8/5 上午10:16, Yan Zhao wrote: >> > > > On Wed, Aug 05, 2020 at 10:22:15AM +0800, Jason Wang wrote: >> > > > > On 2020/8/5 上午12:35, Cornelia Huck wrote: >> > > > > > [sorry about not chiming in earlier] >> > > > > > >> > > > > > On Wed, 29 Jul 2020 16:05:03 +0800 >> > > > > > Yan Zhao <yan.y.zhao@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> > > > > > >> > > > > > > On Mon, Jul 27, 2020 at 04:23:21PM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: >> > > > > > (...) >> > > > > > >> > > > > > > > Based on the feedback we've received, the previously proposed interface >> > > > > > > > is not viable. I think there's agreement that the user needs to be >> > > > > > > > able to parse and interpret the version information. Using json seems >> > > > > > > > viable, but I don't know if it's the best option. Is there any >> > > > > > > > precedent of markup strings returned via sysfs we could follow? >> > > > > > I don't think encoding complex information in a sysfs file is a viable >> > > > > > approach. Quoting Documentation/filesystems/sysfs.rst: >> > > > > > >> > > > > > "Attributes should be ASCII text files, preferably with only one value >> > > > > > per file. It is noted that it may not be efficient to contain only one >> > > > > > value per file, so it is socially acceptable to express an array of >> > > > > > values of the same type. >> > > > > > Mixing types, expressing multiple lines of data, and doing fancy >> > > > > > formatting of data is heavily frowned upon." >> > > > > > >> > > > > > Even though this is an older file, I think these restrictions still >> > > > > > apply. >> > > > > +1, that's another reason why devlink(netlink) is better. >> > > > > >> > > > hi Jason, >> > > > do you have any materials or sample code about devlink, so we can have a good >> > > > study of it? >> > > > I found some kernel docs about it but my preliminary study didn't show me the >> > > > advantage of devlink. >> > > >> > > CC Jiri and Parav for a better answer for this. >> > > >> > > My understanding is that the following advantages are obvious (as I replied >> > > in another thread): >> > > >> > > - existing users (NIC, crypto, SCSI, ib), mature and stable >> > > - much better error reporting (ext_ack other than string or errno) >> > > - namespace aware >> > > - do not couple with kobject >> > Jason, what is your use case? >> >> >> I think the use case is to report device compatibility for live migration. >> Yan proposed a simple sysfs based migration version first, but it looks not >> sufficient and something based on JSON is discussed. >> >> Yan, can you help to summarize the discussion so far for Jiri as a >> reference? >> >yes. >we are currently defining an device live migration compatibility >interface in order to let user space like openstack and libvirt knows >which two devices are live migration compatible. >currently the devices include mdev (a kernel emulated virtual device) >and physical devices (e.g. a VF of a PCI SRIOV device). > >the attributes we want user space to compare including >common attribues: > device_api: vfio-pci, vfio-ccw... > mdev_type: mdev type of mdev or similar signature for physical device > It specifies a device's hardware capability. e.g. > i915-GVTg_V5_4 means it's of 1/4 of a gen9 Intel graphics > device. > software_version: device driver's version. > in <major>.<minor>[.bugfix] scheme, where there is no > compatibility across major versions, minor versions have > forward compatibility (ex. 1-> 2 is ok, 2 -> 1 is not) and > bugfix version number indicates some degree of internal > improvement that is not visible to the user in terms of > features or compatibility, > >vendor specific attributes: each vendor may define different attributes > device id : device id of a physical devices or mdev's parent pci device. > it could be equal to pci id for pci devices > aggregator: used together with mdev_type. e.g. aggregator=2 together > with i915-GVTg_V5_4 means 2*1/4=1/2 of a gen9 Intel > graphics device. > remote_url: for a local NVMe VF, it may be configured with a remote > url of a remote storage and all data is stored in the > remote side specified by the remote url. > ... > >Comparing those attributes by user space alone is not an easy job, as it >can't simply assume an equal relationship between source attributes and >target attributes. e.g. >for a source device of mdev_type=i915-GVTg_V5_4,aggregator=2, (1/2 of >gen9), it actually could find a compatible device of >mdev_type=i915-GVTg_V5_8,aggregator=4 (also 1/2 of gen9), >if mdev_type of i915-GVTg_V5_4 is not available in the target machine. > >So, in our current proposal, we want to create two sysfs attributes >under a device sysfs node. >/sys/<path to device>/migration/self >/sys/<path to device>/migration/compatible > >#cat /sys/<path to device>/migration/self >device_type=vfio_pci >mdev_type=i915-GVTg_V5_4 >device_id=8086591d >aggregator=2 >software_version=1.0.0 > >#cat /sys/<path to device>/migration/compatible >device_type=vfio_pci >mdev_type=i915-GVTg_V5_{val1:int:2,4,8} >device_id=8086591d >aggregator={val1}/2 >software_version=1.0.0 > >The /sys/<path to device>/migration/self specifies self attributes of >a device. >The /sys/<path to device>/migration/compatible specifies the list of >compatible devices of a device. as in the example, compatible devices >could have > device_type == vfio_pci && > device_id == 8086591d && > software_version == 1.0.0 && > ( > (mdev_type of i915-GVTg_V5_2 && aggregator==1) || > (mdev_type of i915-GVTg_V5_4 && aggregator==2) || > (mdev_type of i915-GVTg_V5_8 && aggregator=4) > ) > >by comparing whether a target device is in compatible list of source >device, the user space can know whether a two devices are live migration >compatible. > >Additional notes: >1)software_version in the compatible list may not be necessary as it >already has a major.minor.bugfix scheme. >2)for vendor attribute like remote_url, it may not be statically >assigned and could be changed with a device interface. > >So, as Cornelia pointed that it's not good to use complex format in >a sysfs attribute, we'd like to know whether there're other good ways to >our use case, e.g. splitting a single attribute to multiple simple sysfs >attributes as what Cornelia suggested or devlink that Jason has strongly >recommended. Hi Yan. Thanks for the explanation, I'm still fuzzy about the details. Anyway, I suggest you to check "devlink dev info" command we have implemented for multiple drivers. You can try netdevsim to test this. I think that the info you need to expose might be put there. Devlink creates instance per-device. Specific device driver calls into devlink core to create the instance. What device do you have? What driver is it handled by? > >Thanks >Yan > > >