On Thu, 10 Dec 2020 10:51:23 -0500 Matthew Rosato <mjrosato@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On 12/10/20 7:33 AM, Cornelia Huck wrote: > > On Wed, 9 Dec 2020 15:27:46 -0500 > > Matthew Rosato <mjrosato@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >> Today, ISM devices are completely disallowed for vfio-pci passthrough as > >> QEMU will reject the device due to an (inappropriate) MSI-X check. > >> However, in an effort to enable ISM device passthrough, I realized that the > >> manner in which ISM performs block write operations is highly incompatible > >> with the way that QEMU s390 PCI instruction interception and > >> vfio_pci_bar_rw break up I/O operations into 8B and 4B operations -- ISM > >> devices have particular requirements in regards to the alignment, size and > >> order of writes performed. Furthermore, they require that legacy/non-MIO > >> s390 PCI instructions are used, which is also not guaranteed when the I/O > >> is passed through the typical userspace channels. > > > > The part about the non-MIO instructions confuses me. How can MIO > > instructions be generated with the current code, and why does changing > > So to be clear, they are not being generated at all in the guest as the > necessary facility is reported as unavailable. > > Let's talk about Linux in LPAR / the host kernel: When hardware that > supports MIO instructions is available, all userspace I/O traffic is > going to be routed through the MIO variants of the s390 PCI > instructions. This is working well for other device types, but does not > work for ISM which does not support these variants. However, the ISM > driver also does not invoke the userspace I/O routines for the kernel, > it invokes the s390 PCI layer directly, which in turn ensures the proper > PCI instructions are used -- This approach falls apart when the guest > ISM driver invokes those routines in the guest -- we (qemu) pass those > non-MIO instructions from the guest as memory operations through > vfio-pci, traversing through the vfio I/O layer in the guest > (vfio_pci_bar_rw and friends), where we then arrive in the host s390 PCI > layer -- where the MIO variant is used because the facility is available. > > Per conversations with Niklas (on CC), it's not trivial to decide by the > time we reach the s390 PCI I/O layer to switch gears and use the non-MIO > instruction set. > > > the write pattern help? > > The write pattern is a separate issue from non-MIO instruction > requirements... Certain address spaces require specific instructions to > be used (so, no substituting PCISTG for PCISTB - that happens too by > default for any writes coming into the host s390 PCI layer that are > <=8B, and they all are when the PCISTB is broken up into 8B memory > operations that travel through vfio_pci_bar_rw, which further breaks > those up into 4B operations). There's also a requirement for some > writes that the data, if broken up, be written in a certain order in > order to properly trigger events. :( The ability to pass the entire > PCISTB payload vs breaking it into 8B chunks is also significantly faster. Let me summarize this to make sure I understand this new region correctly: - some devices may have relaxed alignment/length requirements for pcistb (and friends?) - some devices may actually require writes to be done in a large chunk instead of being broken up (is that a strict subset of the devices above?) - some devices do not support the new MIO instructions (is that a subset of the relaxed alignment devices? I'm not familiar with the MIO instructions) The patchsets introduce a new region that (a) is used by QEMU to submit writes in one go, and (b) makes sure to call into the non-MIO instructions directly; it's basically killing two birds with one stone for ISM devices. Are these two requirements (large writes and non-MIO) always going hand-in-hand, or is ISM just an odd device? If there's an expectation that the new region will always use the non-MIO instructions (in addition to the changed write handling), it should be noted in the description for the region as well.