On Fri, 25 Feb 2022 at 16:12, Alexander Graf <graf@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > On 25.02.22 15:33, Jason A. Donenfeld wrote: > > On Fri, Feb 25, 2022 at 03:18:43PM +0100, Alexander Graf wrote: > >>> I recall this part of the old thread. From what I understood, using > >>> "VMGENID" + "QEMUVGID" worked /well enough/, even if that wasn't > >>> technically in-spec. Ard noted that relying on _CID like that is > >>> technically an ACPI spec notification. So we're between one spec and > >>> another, basically, and doing "VMGENID" + "QEMUVGID" requires fewer > >>> changes, as mentioned, appears to work fine in my testing. > >>> > >>> However, with that said, I think supporting this via "VM_Gen_Counter" > >>> would be a better eventual thing to do, but will require acks and > >>> changes from the ACPI maintainers. Do you think you could prepare your > >>> patch proposal above as something on-top of my tree [1]? And if you can > >>> convince the ACPI maintainers that that's okay, then I'll happily take > >>> the patch. > >> > >> Sure, let me send the ACPI patch stand alone. No need to include the > >> VMGenID change in there. > > That's fine. If the ACPI people take it for 5.18, then we can count on > > it being there and adjust the vmgenid driver accordingly also for 5.18. > > > > I just booted up a Windows VM, and it looks like Hyper-V uses > > "Hyper_V_Gen_Counter_V1", which is also quite long, so we can't really > > HID match on that either. > > > Yes, due to the same problem. I'd really prefer we sort out the ACPI > matching before this goes mainline. Matching on _HID is explicitly > discouraged in the VMGenID spec. > OK, this really sucks. Quoting the ACPI spec: """ A _HID object evaluates to either a numeric 32-bit compressed EISA type ID or a string. If a string, the format must be an alphanumeric PNP or ACPI ID with no asterisk or other leading characters. A valid PNP ID must be of the form "AAA####" where A is an uppercase letter and # is a hex digit. A valid ACPI ID must be of the form "NNNN####" where N is an uppercase letter or a digit ('0'-'9') and # is a hex digit. This specification reserves the string "ACPI" for use only with devices defined herein. It further reserves all strings representing 4 HEX digits for exclusive use with PCI-assigned Vendor IDs. """ So now we have to implement Microsoft's fork of ACPI to be able to use this device, even if we expose it from QEMU instead of Hyper-V? I strongly object to that. Instead, we can match on _HID exposed by QEMU, and cordially invite Microsoft to align their spec with the ACPI spec.