Re: KVM devices assignment; PCIe AER?

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On Wed, 27 Oct 2010, Alex Williamson wrote:
No, emulated devices trigger interrupts directly with qemu_set_irq.
irqfds are currently only used by vhost afaik, since it's being
interrupted externally, much like pass through devices are.

Fair enough. Thanks for the clarification.

Sort of.  When the VFIO device triggers an interrupt, we get notified
via the eventfd we've registered for that interrupt.  We can then call
qemu_set_irq directly to raise that interrupt in the KVM kernel APIC.
That much works today.

Understood but performance wise this is no good for KVM right?

The irqfd mechanism is simply a way for KVM to
directly consume the eventfd and raise an interrupt via a pre-setup
vector.  That's yet to be implemented for INTx on VFIO, but should
mostly be a matter of connecting existing pieces together.  It's working
for MSI-X.

OK, I was on the impression you already had irqfd 'connected' to KVM from VFIO... This is why I was asking about the nature of the changed in VFIO.

When VFIO sends an interrupt, it disables the physical device from
generating more interrupts (this is where VFIO requires PCI 2.3
compliant devices for the INTx disable bit int he status register).
When the guest services the interrupt, we can detect this by catching
the EOI of the IOAPIC.  At that point, we can re-eanble interrupts on
the device.  Wash, rinse, repeat.

To do this in qemu, I created a callback on the ioapic where drivers can
register for the interrupt they care about.  Since KVM moves the ioapic
into the kernel, we need to extend this into KVM and have yet another
eventfd mechanism.  It's possible that we could have the VFIO kernel
module also receive this eventfd, re-enabling interrupts on the device,
in much the same way as above.

In the cases of KVM where are you going to catch the EIO? For some reason I'm on the impression that this is part of KVM. If so then how are you going to 'signal' to VFIO? Cannot use eventfd here right?

Yes, none of this requires KVM specific modifications to VFIO.  VFIO is
still just triggering eventfds, and hopefully receiving one via an
irqfd-like mechanism for EOI.

Thanks for your reply.
-Etienne

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