On Mon, 25 Apr 2022 11:10:14 +0100 Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Fri, Apr 22, 2022 at 04:09:43PM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote: > > [Cc +libvirt folks] > > > > On Thu, 14 Apr 2022 03:46:52 -0700 > > Yi Liu <yi.l.liu@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > > With the introduction of iommufd[1], the linux kernel provides a generic > > > interface for userspace drivers to propagate their DMA mappings to kernel > > > for assigned devices. This series does the porting of the VFIO devices > > > onto the /dev/iommu uapi and let it coexist with the legacy implementation. > > > Other devices like vpda, vfio mdev and etc. are not considered yet. > > snip > > > > The selection of the backend is made on a device basis using the new > > > iommufd option (on/off/auto). By default the iommufd backend is selected > > > if supported by the host and by QEMU (iommufd KConfig). This option is > > > currently available only for the vfio-pci device. For other types of > > > devices, it does not yet exist and the legacy BE is chosen by default. > > > > I've discussed this a bit with Eric, but let me propose a different > > command line interface. Libvirt generally likes to pass file > > descriptors to QEMU rather than grant it access to those files > > directly. This was problematic with vfio-pci because libvirt can't > > easily know when QEMU will want to grab another /dev/vfio/vfio > > container. Therefore we abandoned this approach and instead libvirt > > grants file permissions. > > > > However, with iommufd there's no reason that QEMU ever needs more than > > a single instance of /dev/iommufd and we're using per device vfio file > > descriptors, so it seems like a good time to revisit this. > > I assume access to '/dev/iommufd' gives the process somewhat elevated > privileges, such that you don't want to unconditionally give QEMU > access to this device ? It's not that much dissimilar to /dev/vfio/vfio, it's an unprivileged interface which should have limited scope for abuse, but more so here the goal would be to de-privilege QEMU that one step further that it cannot open the device file itself. > > The interface I was considering would be to add an iommufd object to > > QEMU, so we might have a: > > > > -device iommufd[,fd=#][,id=foo] > > > > For non-libivrt usage this would have the ability to open /dev/iommufd > > itself if an fd is not provided. This object could be shared with > > other iommufd users in the VM and maybe we'd allow multiple instances > > for more esoteric use cases. [NB, maybe this should be a -object rather than > > -device since the iommufd is not a guest visible device?] > > Yes, -object would be the right answer for something that's purely > a host side backend impl selector. > > > The vfio-pci device might then become: > > > > -device vfio-pci[,host=DDDD:BB:DD.f][,sysfsdev=/sys/path/to/device][,fd=#][,iommufd=foo] > > > > So essentially we can specify the device via host, sysfsdev, or passing > > an fd to the vfio device file. When an iommufd object is specified, > > "foo" in the example above, each of those options would use the > > vfio-device access mechanism, essentially the same as iommufd=on in > > your example. With the fd passing option, an iommufd object would be > > required and necessarily use device level access. > > > > In your example, the iommufd=auto seems especially troublesome for > > libvirt because QEMU is going to have different locked memory > > requirements based on whether we're using type1 or iommufd, where the > > latter resolves the duplicate accounting issues. libvirt needs to know > > deterministically which backed is being used, which this proposal seems > > to provide, while at the same time bringing us more in line with fd > > passing. Thoughts? Thanks, > > Yep, I agree that libvirt needs to have more direct control over this. > This is also even more important if there are notable feature differences > in the 2 backends. > > I wonder if anyone has considered an even more distinct impl, whereby > we have a completely different device type on the backend, eg > > -device vfio-iommu-pci[,host=DDDD:BB:DD.f][,sysfsdev=/sys/path/to/device][,fd=#][,iommufd=foo] > > If a vendor wants to fully remove the legacy impl, they can then use the > Kconfig mechanism to disable the build of the legacy impl device, while > keeping the iommu impl (or vica-verca if the new iommu impl isn't considered > reliable enough for them to support yet). > > Libvirt would use > > -object iommu,id=iommu0,fd=NNN > -device vfio-iommu-pci,fd=MMM,iommu=iommu0 > > Non-libvirt would use a simpler > > -device vfio-iommu-pci,host=0000:03:22.1 > > with QEMU auto-creating a 'iommu' object in the background. > > This would fit into libvirt's existing modelling better. We currently have > a concept of a PCI assignment backend, which previously supported the > legacy PCI assignment, vs the VFIO PCI assignment. This new iommu impl > feels like a 3rd PCI assignment approach, and so fits with how we modelled > it as a different device type in the past. I don't think we want to conflate "iommu" and "iommufd", we're creating an object that interfaces into the iommufd uAPI, not an iommu itself. Likewise "vfio-iommu-pci" is just confusing, there was an iommu interface previously, it's just a different implementation now and as far as the VM interface to the device, it's identical. Note that a "vfio-iommufd-pci" device multiplies the matrix of every vfio device for a rather subtle implementation detail. My expectation would be that libvirt uses: -object iommufd,id=iommufd0,fd=NNN -device vfio-pci,fd=MMM,iommufd=iommufd0 Whereas simple QEMU command line would be: -object iommufd,id=iommufd0 -device vfio-pci,iommufd=iommufd0,host=0000:02:00.0 The iommufd object would open /dev/iommufd itself. Creating an implicit iommufd object is someone problematic because one of the things I forgot to highlight in my previous description is that the iommufd object is meant to be shared across not only various vfio devices (platform, ccw, ap, nvme, etc), but also across subsystems, ex. vdpa. If the old style were used: -device vfio-pci,host=0000:02:00.0 Then QEMU would use vfio for the IOMMU backend. If libvirt/userspace wants to query whether "legacy" vfio is still supported by the host kernel, I think it'd only need to look for whether the /dev/vfio/vfio container interface still exists. If we need some means for QEMU to remove legacy support, I'd rather find a way to do it via probing device options. It's easy enough to see if iommufd support exists by looking for the presence of the iommufd option for the vfio-pci device and Kconfig within QEMU could be used regardless of whether we define a new device name. Thanks, Alex