On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 11:38:40 +0200, Sasha Levin <levinsasha928@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, 2011-11-23 at 10:49 +0200, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: > > On Wed, Nov 23, 2011 at 01:02:22PM +1030, Rusty Russell wrote: > > > +/* Fields in VIRTIO_PCI_CAP_COMMON_CFG: */ > > > +struct virtio_pci_common_cfg { > > > + /* About the whole device. */ > > > + __u64 device_features; /* read-only */ > > > + __u64 guest_features; /* read-write */ > > > > We currently require atomic accesses to common fields. > > Some architectures might not have such for 64 bit, > > so these need to be split I think ... > > We can consider stealing the feature implementation from virtio-mmio: > Use the first 32 bits as a selector and the last as the features > themselves. > > It's more complex to work with, but it provides 2**32 32 feature bits > (which should be enough for a while) and it solves the atomic access > issue. That works. I don't expect we'll need more than 64 features given that virtio_net hasn't seen a new one in over a year, but it's gone from 5 to 18 in 4 years, so another 32 bits at that rate only gets us another decade. Unfortunately, it doesn't solve the queue_address problem. We currently multiply the (32-bit) address by 4096 (the alignment). If drivers are going to reduce alignment, that makes it trickier, hence the change here to a 64. Simplicity. We could cheat and assert that a 32-bit write there implies 0 in the upper bits, and hope that all 64 bit platforms can do a 64-bit atomic write. Or insist the value not be intepreted until the guest writes its (first) feature bit. Perhaps we really need a "I'm done configuring!" trigger, now we can't use the feature bit field for that. Thoughts welcome... Rusty. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe kvm" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html