On 11.11.21 18:48, Eric Farman wrote: > On Thu, 2021-11-11 at 17:13 +0100, Janosch Frank wrote: >> On 11/11/21 16:03, Eric Farman wrote: >>> On Thu, 2021-11-11 at 10:15 +0100, David Hildenbrand wrote: >>>> On 10.11.21 21:33, Eric Farman wrote: >>>>> With commit 2444b352c3ac ("KVM: s390: forward most SIGP orders >>>>> to >>>>> user >>>>> space") we have a capability that allows the "fast" SIGP orders >>>>> (as >>>>> defined by the Programming Notes for the SIGNAL PROCESSOR >>>>> instruction in >>>>> the Principles of Operation) to be handled in-kernel, while all >>>>> others are >>>>> sent to userspace for processing. >>>>> >>>>> This works fine but it creates a situation when, for example, a >>>>> SIGP SENSE >>>>> might return CC1 (STATUS STORED, and status bits indicating the >>>>> vcpu is >>>>> stopped), when in actuality userspace is still processing a >>>>> SIGP >>>>> STOP AND >>>>> STORE STATUS order, and the vcpu is not yet actually stopped. >>>>> Thus, >>>>> the >>>>> SIGP SENSE should actually be returning CC2 (busy) instead of >>>>> CC1. >>>>> >>>>> To fix this, add another CPU capability, dependent on the >>>>> USER_SIGP >>>>> one, >>>>> and two associated IOCTLs. One IOCTL will be used by userspace >>>>> to >>>>> mark a >>>>> vcpu "busy" processing a SIGP order, and cause concurrent >>>>> orders >>>>> handled >>>>> in-kernel to be returned with CC2 (busy). Another IOCTL will be >>>>> used by >>>>> userspace to mark the SIGP "finished", and the vcpu free to >>>>> process >>>>> additional orders. >>>>> >>>> >>>> This looks much cleaner to me, thanks! >>>> >>>> [...] >>>> >>>>> diff --git a/arch/s390/kvm/kvm-s390.h b/arch/s390/kvm/kvm- >>>>> s390.h >>>>> index c07a050d757d..54371cede485 100644 >>>>> --- a/arch/s390/kvm/kvm-s390.h >>>>> +++ b/arch/s390/kvm/kvm-s390.h >>>>> @@ -82,6 +82,22 @@ static inline int is_vcpu_idle(struct >>>>> kvm_vcpu >>>>> *vcpu) >>>>> return test_bit(vcpu->vcpu_idx, vcpu->kvm- >>>>>> arch.idle_mask); >>>>> } >>>>> >>>>> +static inline bool kvm_s390_vcpu_is_sigp_busy(struct kvm_vcpu >>>>> *vcpu) >>>>> +{ >>>>> + return (atomic_read(&vcpu->arch.sigp_busy) == 1); >>>> >>>> You can drop () >>>> >>>>> +} >>>>> + >>>>> +static inline bool kvm_s390_vcpu_set_sigp_busy(struct kvm_vcpu >>>>> *vcpu) >>>>> +{ >>>>> + /* Return zero for success, or -EBUSY if another vcpu >>>>> won */ >>>>> + return (atomic_cmpxchg(&vcpu->arch.sigp_busy, 0, 1) == >>>>> 0) ? 0 : >>>>> -EBUSY; >>>> >>>> You can drop () as well. >>>> >>>> We might not need the -EBUSY semantics after all. User space can >>>> just >>>> track if it was set, because it's in charge of setting it. >>> >>> Hrm, I added this to distinguish a newer kernel with an older QEMU, >>> but >>> of course an older QEMU won't know the difference either. I'll >>> doublecheck that this is works fine in the different permutations. >>> >>>>> +} >>>>> + >>>>> +static inline void kvm_s390_vcpu_clear_sigp_busy(struct >>>>> kvm_vcpu >>>>> *vcpu) >>>>> +{ >>>>> + atomic_set(&vcpu->arch.sigp_busy, 0); >>>>> +} >>>>> + >>>>> static inline int kvm_is_ucontrol(struct kvm *kvm) >>>>> { >>>>> #ifdef CONFIG_KVM_S390_UCONTROL >>>>> diff --git a/arch/s390/kvm/sigp.c b/arch/s390/kvm/sigp.c >>>>> index 5ad3fb4619f1..a37496ea6dfa 100644 >>>>> --- a/arch/s390/kvm/sigp.c >>>>> +++ b/arch/s390/kvm/sigp.c >>>>> @@ -276,6 +276,10 @@ static int handle_sigp_dst(struct kvm_vcpu >>>>> *vcpu, u8 order_code, >>>>> if (!dst_vcpu) >>>>> return SIGP_CC_NOT_OPERATIONAL; >>>>> >>>>> + if (kvm_s390_vcpu_is_sigp_busy(dst_vcpu)) { >>>>> + return SIGP_CC_BUSY; >>>>> + } >>>> >>>> You can drop {} >>> >>> Arg, I had some debug in there which needed the braces, and of >>> course >>> it's unnecessary now. Thanks. >>> >>>>> + >>>>> switch (order_code) { >>>>> case SIGP_SENSE: >>>>> vcpu->stat.instruction_sigp_sense++; >>>>> @@ -411,6 +415,12 @@ int kvm_s390_handle_sigp(struct kvm_vcpu >>>>> *vcpu) >>>>> if (handle_sigp_order_in_user_space(vcpu, order_code, >>>>> cpu_addr)) >>>>> return -EOPNOTSUPP; >>>>> >>>>> + /* Check the current vcpu, if it was a target from >>>>> another vcpu >>>>> */ >>>>> + if (kvm_s390_vcpu_is_sigp_busy(vcpu)) { >>>>> + kvm_s390_set_psw_cc(vcpu, SIGP_CC_BUSY); >>>>> + return 0; >>>>> + } >>>> >>>> I don't think we need this. I think the above (checking the >>>> target of >>>> a >>>> SIGP order) is sufficient. Or which situation do you have in >>>> mind? >>>> >>> >>> Hrm... I think you're right. I was thinking of this: >>> >>> VCPU 1 - SIGP STOP CPU 2 >>> VCPU 2 - SIGP SENSE CPU 1 >>> >>> But of course either CPU2 is going to be marked "busy" first, and >>> the >>> sense doesn't get processed until it's reset, or the sense arrives >>> first, and the busy/notbusy doesn't matter. Let me doublecheck my >>> tests >>> for the non-RFC version. >>> >>>> >>>> I do wonder if we want to make this a kvm_arch_vcpu_ioctl() >>>> instead, >>> >>> In one of my original attempts between v1 and v2, I had put this >>> there. >>> This reliably deadlocks my guest, because the caller >>> (kvm_vcpu_ioctl()) >>> tries to acquire vcpu->mutex, and racing SIGPs (via KVM_RUN) might >>> already be holding it. Thus, it's an async ioctl. I could fold it >>> into >>> the existing interrupt ioctl, but as those are architected structs >>> it >>> seems more natural do it this way. Or I have mis-understood >>> something >>> along the way? >>> >>>> essentially just providing a KVM_S390_SET_SIGP_BUSY *and* >>>> providing >>>> the >>>> order. "order == 0" sets it to !busy. >>> >>> I'd tried this too, since it provided some nice debug-ability. >>> Unfortunately, I have a testcase (which I'll eventually get folded >>> into >>> kvm-unit-tests :)) that picks a random order between 0-255, knowing >>> that there's only a couple handfuls of valid orders, to check the >>> response. Zero is valid architecturally (POPS figure 4-29), even if >>> it's unassigned. The likelihood of it becoming assigned is probably >>> quite low, but I'm not sure that I like special-casing an order of >>> zero >>> in this way. >>> >> >> Looking at the API I'd like to avoid having two IOCTLs > > Since the order is a single byte, we could have the payload of an ioctl > say "0-255 is an order that we're busy processing, anything higher than > that resets the busy" or something. That would remove the need for a > second IOCTL. Maybe just pass an int and treat a negative (or just -1) value as clearing the order. -- Thanks, David / dhildenb