Re: [PATCH 2/2] vDPA: conditionally read fields in virtio-net dev

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On 8/23/2022 2:52 PM, Zhu, Lingshan wrote:


On 8/23/2022 11:26 AM, Jason Wang wrote:
On Mon, Aug 22, 2022 at 1:08 PM Zhu, Lingshan <lingshan.zhu@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:


On 8/20/2022 4:55 PM, Si-Wei Liu wrote:

On 8/18/2022 5:42 PM, Jason Wang wrote:
On Fri, Aug 19, 2022 at 7:20 AM Si-Wei Liu <si-wei.liu@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

On 8/17/2022 9:15 PM, Jason Wang wrote:
在 2022/8/17 18:37, Michael S. Tsirkin 写道:
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 05:43:22PM +0800, Zhu, Lingshan wrote:
On 8/17/2022 5:39 PM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 05:13:59PM +0800, Zhu, Lingshan wrote:
On 8/17/2022 4:55 PM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
On Wed, Aug 17, 2022 at 10:14:26AM +0800, Zhu, Lingshan wrote:
Yes it is a little messy, and we can not check _F_VERSION_1
because of
transitional devices, so maybe this is the best we can do for
now
I think vhost generally needs an API to declare config space
endian-ness
to kernel. vdpa can reuse that too then.
Yes, I remember you have mentioned some IOCTL to set the
endian-ness,
for vDPA, I think only the vendor driver knows the endian,
so we may need a new function vdpa_ops->get_endian().
In the last thread, we say maybe it's better to add a comment for
now.
But if you think we should add a vdpa_ops->get_endian(), I can
work
on it for sure!

Thanks
Zhu Lingshan
I think QEMU has to set endian-ness. No one else knows.
Yes, for SW based vhost it is true. But for HW vDPA, only
the device & driver knows the endian, I think we can not
"set" a hardware's endian.
QEMU knows the guest endian-ness and it knows that
device is accessed through the legacy interface.
It can accordingly send endian-ness to the kernel and
kernel can propagate it to the driver.
I wonder if we can simply force LE and then Qemu can do the endian
conversion?
convert from LE for config space fields only, or QEMU has to forcefully
mediate and covert endianness for all device memory access including
even the datapath (fields in descriptor and avail/used rings)?
Former. Actually, I want to force modern devices for vDPA when
developing the vDPA framework. But then we see requirements for
transitional or even legacy (e.g the Ali ENI parent). So it
complicates things a lot.

I think several ideas has been proposed:

1) Your proposal of having a vDPA specific way for
modern/transitional/legacy awareness. This seems very clean since each
transport should have the ability to do that but it still requires
some kind of mediation for the case e.g running BE legacy guest on LE
host.
In theory it seems like so, though practically I wonder if we can just
forbid BE legacy driver from running on modern LE host. For those who
care about legacy BE guest, they mostly like could and should talk to
vendor to get native BE support to achieve hardware acceleration,
The problem is the hardware still needs a way to know the endian of the guest?

few
of them would count on QEMU in mediating or emulating the datapath
(otherwise I don't see the benefit of adopting vDPA?). I still feel
that not every hardware vendor has to offer backward compatibility
(transitional device) with legacy interface/behavior (BE being just
one),
Probably, I agree it is a corner case, and dealing with transitional
device for the following setups is very challenge for hardware:

- driver without IOMMU_PLATFORM support, (requiring device to send
translated request which have security implications)
- BE legacy guest on LE host, (requiring device to have a way to know
the endian)
- device specific requirement (e.g modern virtio-net mandate minimal
header length to contain mrg_rxbuf even if the device doesn't offer
it)

It is not obvious for the hardware vendor, so we may end up defecting
in the implementation. Dealing with compatibility for the transitional
devices is kind of a nightmare which there's no way for the spec to
rule the behavior of legacy devices.

  this is unlike the situation on software virtio device, which
has legacy support since day one. I think we ever discussed it before:
for those vDPA vendors who don't offer legacy guest support, maybe we
should mandate some feature for e.g. VERSION_1, as these devices
really don't offer functionality of the opposite side (!VERSION_1)
during negotiation.
I've tried something similar here (a global mandatory instead of per device).

https://lkml.org/lkml/2021/6/4/26
I think this is the best option

But for some reason, it is not applied by Michael. It would be a great
relief if we support modern devices only. Maybe it's time to revisit
this idea then we can introduce new backend features and then we can
mandate VERSION_1

Having it said, perhaps we should also allow vendor device to
implement only partial support for legacy. We can define "reversed"
backend feature to denote some part of the legacy
interface/functionality not getting implemented by device. For
instance, VHOST_BACKEND_F_NO_BE_VRING, VHOST_BACKEND_F_NO_BE_CONFIG,
VHOST_BACKEND_F_NO_ALIGNED_VRING,
VHOST_BACKEND_NET_F_NO_WRITEABLE_MAC, and et al. Not all of these
missing features for legacy would be easy for QEMU to make up for, so
QEMU can selectively emulate those at its best when necessary and
applicable. In other word, this design shouldn't prevent QEMU from
making up for vendor device's partial legacy support.
This looks too heavyweight since it tries to provide compatibility for
legacy drivers. Considering we've introduced modern devices for 5+
years, I'd rather:

- Qemu to mediate the config space stuffs
So that's what I have suggested, new ops to support VHOST_SET_VRING_ENDIAN,
then after QEMU issue this IOCTL, no matter success or fail, QEMU will
know the endian. Then QEMU can mediate the config space.

And these ops(get/get_endian) can help us mediate config space fields in
net_config_fill()
Update:

I am working on a RFC patch series implementing these, and will post it this week

Thanks,
Zhu Lingshan
- Shadow virtqueue to mediate the datapath (AF_XDP told us shadow ring
can perform very well if we do zero-copy).

2) Michael suggests using VHOST_SET_VRING_ENDIAN where it means we
need a new config ops for vDPA bus, but it doesn't solve the issue for
config space (at least from its name). We probably need a new ioctl
for both vring and config space.
Yep adding a new ioctl makes things better, but I think the key is not
the new ioctl. It's whether or not we should enforce every vDPA vendor
driver to implement all transitional interfaces to be spec compliant.
I think the answer is no since the spec allows transitional device.
And we know things will be greatly simplified if vDPA support non
transitional device only.

So we can change the question to:

1) do we need (or is it too late) to enforce non transitional device?
2) if yes, can transitional device be mediate in an efficient way?

For 1), it's probably too late but we can invent new vDPA features as
you suggest to be non transitional. Then we can:

1.1) extend the netlink API to provision non-transitonal device
1.2) work on the non-transtional device in the future
1.3) presenting transitional device via mediation

The previous transitional vDPA work as is, it's probably too late to
fix all the issue we suffer.

For 2), the key part is the datapath mediation, we can use shadow virtqueue.

If we allow them to reject the VHOST_SET_VRING_ENDIAN  or
VHOST_SET_CONFIG_ENDIAN call, what could we do? We would still end up
with same situation of either fail the guest, or trying to
mediate/emulate, right?

Not to mention VHOST_SET_VRING_ENDIAN is rarely supported by vhost
today - few distro kernel has CONFIG_VHOST_CROSS_ENDIAN_LEGACY enabled
and QEMU just ignores the result. vhost doesn't necessarily depend on
it to determine endianness it looks.
I would like to suggest to add two new config ops get/set_vq_endian()
and get/set_config_endian() for vDPA. This is used to:
a) support VHOST_GET/SET_VRING_ENDIAN as MST suggested, and add
VHOST_SET/GET_CONFIG_ENDIAN for vhost_vdpa.
If the device has not implemented interface to set its endianess, then
no matter success or failure of SET_ENDIAN, QEMU knows the endian-ness
anyway.
How can Qemu know the endian in this way? And if it can, there's no
need for the new API?
If we have VHOST_SET_VRING_ENDIAN support for vDPA, then when QEMU sets
the endian of a vDPA device through VHOST_SET_VRING_ENDIAN, no matter
this ioctl success or fail, QEMU knows the endian of the device.
E.g., if QEMU sets BE, but failed, then QEMU knows the device is LE only.

In this case, if the device endianess does not match the guest,
there needs a mediation layer or fail.
b) ops->get_config_endian() can always tell the endian-ness of the
device config space after the vendor driver probing the device. So we
can use this ops->get_config_endian() for
MTU, MAC and other fields handling in vdpa_dev_net_config_fill() and we
don't need to set_features in vdpa_get_config_unlocked(), so no race
conditions.
Every time ops->get_config() returned, we can tell the endian by
ops-config_>get_endian(), we don't need set_features(xxx, 0) if features
negotiation not done.

The question is: Do we need two pairs of ioctls for both vq and config
space? Can config space endian-ness differ from the vqs?
c) do we need a new netlink attr telling the endian-ness to user space?
Generally, I'm not sure this is a good design consider it provides neither:

Compatibility with the virtio spec
I think this is not about the spec, we implement a new pair of ops to set/get_endian(), then we can handle the device config space fields properly, at least to vdpa_dev_net_config_fill().

E.g, we can use __virtio16_to_cpu(vdpa->get_endian(), xxx);

And this can support VHOST_SET_VRING_ENDIAN.

nor

Compatibility with the existing vhost API (VHOST_SET_VRING_ENDIAN)
that's true, but if the endian does not match the guest endian, it can not
work without a mediation layer anyway.

Thanks
Zhu Lingshan

Thanks

Thanks,
Zhu Lingshan
or

3) revisit the idea of forcing modern only device which may simplify
things a lot
I am not actually against forcing modern only config space, given that
it's not hard for either QEMU or individual driver to mediate or
emulate, and for the most part it's not conflict with the goal of
offload or acceleration with vDPA. But forcing LE ring layout IMO
would just kill off the potential of a very good use case. Currently
for our use case the priority for supporting 0.9.5 guest with vDPA is
slightly lower compared to live migration, but it is still in our TODO
list.

Thanks,
-Siwei

which way should we go?

I hope
it's not the latter, otherwise it loses the point to use vDPA for
datapath acceleration.

Even if its the former, it's a little weird for vendor device to
implement a LE config space with BE ring layout, although still
possible...
Right.

Thanks

-Siwei
Thanks


So if you think we should add a vdpa_ops->get_endian(),
I will drop these comments in the next version of
series, and work on a new patch for get_endian().

Thanks,
Zhu Lingshan
Guests don't get endian-ness from devices so this seems pointless.






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