RE: Plan for /dev/ioasid RFC v2

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> From: Jason Gunthorpe <jgg@xxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Friday, June 18, 2021 8:20 AM
> 
> On Thu, Jun 17, 2021 at 03:14:52PM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote:
> 
> > I've referred to this as a limitation of type1, that we can't put
> > devices within the same group into different address spaces, such as
> > behind separate vRoot-Ports in a vIOMMU config, but really, who cares?
> > As isolation support improves we see fewer multi-device groups, this
> > scenario becomes the exception.  Buy better hardware to use the devices
> > independently.
> 
> This is basically my thinking too, but my conclusion is that we should
> not continue to make groups central to the API.
> 
> As I've explained to David this is actually causing functional
> problems and mess - and I don't see a clean way to keep groups central
> but still have the device in control of what is happening. We need
> this device <-> iommu connection to be direct to robustly model all
> the things that are in the RFC.
> 
> To keep groups central someone needs to sketch out how to solve
> today's mdev SW page table and mdev PASID issues in a clean
> way. Device centric is my suggestion on how to make it clean, but I
> haven't heard an alternative??
> 
> So, I view the purpose of this discussion to scope out what a
> device-centric world looks like and then if we can securely fit in the
> legacy non-isolated world on top of that clean future oriented
> API. Then decide if it is work worth doing or not.
> 
> To my mind it looks like it is not so bad, granted not every detail is
> clear, and no code has be sketched, but I don't see a big scary
> blocker emerging. An extra ioctl or two, some special logic that
> activates for >1 device groups that looks a lot like VFIO's current
> logic..
> 
> At some level I would be perfectly fine if we made the group FD part
> of the API for >1 device groups - except that complexifies every user
> space implementation to deal with that. It doesn't feel like a good
> trade off.
> 

Would it be an acceptable tradeoff by leaving >1 device groups 
supported only via legacy VFIO (which is anyway kept for backward 
compatibility), if we think such scenario is being deprecated over 
time (thus little value to add new features on it)? Then all new 
sub-systems including vdpa and new vfio only support singleton 
device group via /dev/iommu...

Thanks
Kevin




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