śr., 22 cze 2022 o 23:50 Limonciello, Mario <mario.limonciello@xxxxxxx> napisał(a): > > On 6/22/2022 04:53, Grzegorz Jaszczyk wrote: > > pon., 20 cze 2022 o 18:32 Limonciello, Mario > > <mario.limonciello@xxxxxxx> napisał(a): > >> > >> On 6/20/2022 10:43, Grzegorz Jaszczyk wrote: > >>> czw., 16 cze 2022 o 18:58 Limonciello, Mario > >>> <mario.limonciello@xxxxxxx> napisał(a): > >>>> > >>>> On 6/16/2022 11:48, Sean Christopherson wrote: > >>>>> On Wed, Jun 15, 2022, Grzegorz Jaszczyk wrote: > >>>>>> pt., 10 cze 2022 o 16:30 Sean Christopherson <seanjc@xxxxxxxxxx> napisał(a): > >>>>>>> MMIO or PIO for the actual exit, there's nothing special about hypercalls. As for > >>>>>>> enumerating to the guest that it should do something, why not add a new ACPI_LPS0_* > >>>>>>> function? E.g. something like > >>>>>>> > >>>>>>> static void s2idle_hypervisor_notify(void) > >>>>>>> { > >>>>>>> if (lps0_dsm_func_mask > 0) > >>>>>>> acpi_sleep_run_lps0_dsm(ACPI_LPS0_EXIT_HYPERVISOR_NOTIFY > >>>>>>> lps0_dsm_func_mask, lps0_dsm_guid); > >>>>>>> } > >>>>>> > >>>>>> Great, thank you for your suggestion! I will try this approach and > >>>>>> come back. Since this will be the main change in the next version, > >>>>>> will it be ok for you to add Suggested-by: Sean Christopherson > >>>>>> <seanjc@xxxxxxxxxx> tag? > >>>>> > >>>>> If you want, but there's certainly no need to do so. But I assume you or someone > >>>>> at Intel will need to get formal approval for adding another ACPI LPS0 function? > >>>>> I.e. isn't there work to be done outside of the kernel before any patches can be > >>>>> merged? > >>>> > >>>> There are 3 different LPS0 GUIDs in use. An Intel one, an AMD (legacy) > >>>> one, and a Microsoft one. They all have their own specs, and so if this > >>>> was to be added I think all 3 need to be updated. > >>> > >>> Yes this will not be easy to achieve I think. > >>> > >>>> > >>>> As this is Linux specific hypervisor behavior, I don't know you would be > >>>> able to convince Microsoft to update theirs' either. > >>>> > >>>> How about using s2idle_devops? There is a prepare() call and a > >>>> restore() call that is set for each handler. The only consumer of this > >>>> ATM I'm aware of is the amd-pmc driver, but it's done like a > >>>> notification chain so that a bunch of drivers can hook in if they need to. > >>>> > >>>> Then you can have this notification path and the associated ACPI device > >>>> it calls out to be it's own driver. > >>> > >>> Thank you for your suggestion, just to be sure that I've understand > >>> your idea correctly: > >>> 1) it will require to extend acpi_s2idle_dev_ops about something like > >>> hypervisor_notify() call, since existing prepare() is called from end > >>> of acpi_s2idle_prepare_late so it is too early as it was described in > >>> one of previous message (between acpi_s2idle_prepare_late and place > >>> where we use hypercall there are several places where the suspend > >>> could be canceled, otherwise we could probably try to trap on other > >>> acpi_sleep_run_lps0_dsm occurrence from acpi_s2idle_prepare_late). > >>> > >> > >> The idea for prepare() was it would be the absolute last thing before > >> the s2idle loop was run. You're sure that's too early? It's basically > >> the same thing as having a last stage new _DSM call. > >> > >> What about adding a new abort() extension to acpi_s2idle_dev_ops? Then > >> you could catch the cancelled suspend case still and take corrective > >> action (if that action is different than what restore() would do). > > > > It will be problematic since the abort/restore notification could > > arrive too late and therefore the whole system will go to suspend > > thinking that the guest is in desired s2ilde state. Also in this case > > it would be impossible to prevent races and actually making sure that > > the guest is suspended or not. We already had similar discussion with > > Sean earlier in this thread why the notification have to be send just > > before swait_event_exclusive(s2idle_wait_head, s2idle_state == > > S2IDLE_STATE_WAKE) and that the VMM have to have control over guest > > resumption. > > > > Nevertheless if extending acpi_s2idle_dev_ops is possible, why not > > extend it about the hypervisor_notify() and use it in the same place > > where the hypercall is used in this patch? Do you see any issue with > > that? > > If this needs to be a hypercall and the hypercall needs to go at that > specific time, I wouldn't bother with extending acpi_s2idle_dev_ops. > The whole idea there was that this would be less custom and could follow > a spec. Just to clarify - it probably doesn't need to be a hypercall. I've probably misled you with copy-pasting a handler name from the current patch but aiming your and Sean ACPI like approach. What I meant is something like: - extend acpi_s2idle_dev_ops with notify() - implement notify() handler for acpi_s2idle_dev_ops in HYPE0001 driver (without hypercall): static void s2idle_notify(void) { acpi_evaluate_dsm(acpi_handle, guid_of_HYPE0001, 0, ACPI_HYPE_NOTIFY, NULL); } - register it via acpi_register_lps0_dev() from HYPE0001 driver - use it just before swait_event_exclusive(s2idle_wait_head..) as it is with original patch (the name of the function will be different): static void s2idle_hypervisor_notify(void) { struct acpi_s2idle_dev_ops *handler; ... list_for_each_entry(handler, &lps0_s2idle_devops_head, list_node) { if (handler->notify) handler->notify(); } } so it will be like: -> s2idle_enter (just before swait_event_exclusive(s2idle_wait_head,.. ) --> s2idle_hypervisor_notify (as platform_s2idle_ops) ---> notify (as acpi_s2idle_dev_ops) ----> HYPE0001 device driver's notify () routine It will probably be easier to understand it if I actually implement it. Nevertheless this way we ensure that: - notification will be triggered at very last command before actually entering s2idle - we can trap on MMIO/PIO by implementing HYPE0001 specific _DSM method and therefore this implementation will not become hypervisor specific and also not use KVM as "dumb pipe out to userspace" as Sean suggested - we will not have to change existing Intel/AMD/Window spec (3 different LPS0 GUIDs) but thanks to HYPE0001's acpi_s2idle_dev_ops involvment, only care about new HYPE0001 spec > > TBH - given the strong dependency on being the very last command and > this being all Linux specific (you won't need to do something similar > with Windows) - I think the way you already did it makes the most sense. > It seems to me the ACPI device model doesn't really work well for this > scenario. > > > > >> > >>> 2) using newly introduced acpi_s2idle_dev_ops hypervisor_notify() call > >>> will allow to register handler from Intel x86/intel/pmc/core.c driver > >>> and/or AMD x86/amd-pmc.c driver. Therefore we will need to get only > >>> Intel and/or AMD approval about extending the ACPI LPS0 _DSM method, > >>> correct? > >>> > >> > >> Right now the only thing that hooks prepare()/restore() is the amd-pmc > >> driver (unless Intel's PMC had a change I didn't catch yet). > >> > >> I don't think you should be changing any existing drivers but rather > >> introduce another platform driver for this specific case. > >> > >> So it would be something like this: > >> > >> acpi_s2idle_prepare_late > >> -> prepare() > >> --> AMD: amd_pmc handler for prepare() > >> --> Intel: intel_pmc handler for prepare() (conceptual) > >> --> HYPE0001 device: new driver's prepare() routine > >> > >> So the platform driver would match the HYPE0001 device to load, and it > >> wouldn't do anything other than provide a prepare()/restore() handler > >> for your case. > >> > >> You don't need to change any existing specs. If anything a new spec to > >> go with this new ACPI device would be made. Someone would need to > >> reserve the ID and such for it, but I think you can mock it up in advance. > > > > Thank you for your explanation. This means that I should register > > "HYPE" through https://nam11.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fuefi.org%2FPNP_ACPI_Registry&data=05%7C01%7Cmario.limonciello%40amd.com%7C49512293908e4ee17e8c08da54351ed5%7C3dd8961fe4884e608e11a82d994e183d%7C0%7C0%7C637914884458918039%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&sdata=v5VsnxAINiJhOMLpwORLHd13WcYBHf%2FGSNv8Bjhyino%3D&reserved=0 before introducing > > this new driver to Linux. > > I have no experience with the above, so I wonder who should be > > responsible for maintaining such ACPI ID since it will not belong to > > any specific vendor? There is an example of e.g. COREBOOT PROJECT > > using "BOOT" ACPI ID [1], which seems similar in terms of not > > specifying any vendor but rather the project as a responsible entity. > > Maybe you have some recommendations? > > Maybe LF could own a namespace and ID? But I would suggest you make a > mockup that everything works this way before you go explore too much. Yeah, sure. > > Also make sure Rafael is aligned with your mockup. Agree. > > > > > I am also not sure if and where a specification describing such a > > device has to be maintained. Since "HYPE0001" will have its own _DSM > > so will it be required to document it somewhere rather than just using > > it in the driver and preparing proper ACPI tables for guest? > > > >> > >>> I wonder if this will be affordable so just re-thinking loudly if > >>> there is no other mechanism that could be suggested and used upstream > >>> so we could notify hypervisor/vmm about guest entering s2idle state? > >>> Especially that such _DSM function will be introduced only to trap on > >>> some fake MMIO/PIO access and will be useful only for guest ACPI > >>> tables? > >>> > >> > >> Do you need to worry about Microsoft guests using Modern Standby too or > >> is that out of the scope of your problem set? I think you'll be a lot > >> more limited in how this can behave and where you can modify things if so. > >> > > > > I do not need to worry about Microsoft guests. > > Makes life a lot easier :) Agree :) and thank you for all your feedback, Grzegorz