On Thu, Mar 13, 2025 at 11:56 PM Nuno Das Neves <nunodasneves@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On 3/13/2025 12:34 AM, Tianyu Lan wrote: > > On Thu, Mar 13, 2025 at 3:45 AM Nuno Das Neves > > <nunodasneves@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> > >> On 3/10/2025 6:01 AM, Tianyu Lan wrote: > >>> On Thu, Feb 27, 2025 at 7:09 AM Nuno Das Neves > >>> <nunodasneves@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>>> > >>>> Add a pointer hv_synic_eventring_tail to track the tail pointer for the > >>>> SynIC event ring buffer for each SINT. > >>>> > >>>> This will be used by the mshv driver, but must be tracked independently > >>>> since the driver module could be removed and re-inserted. > >>>> > >>>> Signed-off-by: Nuno Das Neves <nunodasneves@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >>>> Reviewed-by: Wei Liu <wei.liu@xxxxxxxxxx> > >>> > >>> It's better to expose a function to check the tail instead of exposing > >>> hv_synic_eventring_tail directly. > >>> > >> What is the advantage of using a function for this? We need to both set > >> and get the tail. > > > > We may add lock or check to avoid race conditions and this depends on the > > user case. This is why I want to see how mshv driver uses it. > > > >> > >>> BTW, how does mshv driver use hv_synic_eventring_tail? Which patch > >>> uses it in this series? > >>> > >> This variable stores indices into the synic eventring page (one for each > >> SINT, and per-cpu). Each SINT has a ringbuffer of u32 messages. The tail > >> index points to the latest one. > >> > >> This is only used for doorbell messages today. The message in this case is > >> a port number which is used to lookup and invoke a callback, which signals > >> ioeventfd(s), to notify the VMM of a guest MMIO write. > >> > >> It is used in patch 10. > > > > I found "extern u8 __percpu **hv_synic_eventring_tail;" in the > > drivers/hv/mshv_root.h of patch 10. > > I seem to miss the code to use it. > > > > +int hv_call_unmap_stat_page(enum hv_stats_object_type type, > > + const union hv_stats_object_identity *identity); > > +int hv_call_modify_spa_host_access(u64 partition_id, struct page **pages, > > + u64 page_struct_count, u32 host_access, > > + u32 flags, u8 acquire); > > + > > +extern struct mshv_root mshv_root; > > +extern enum hv_scheduler_type hv_scheduler_type; > > +extern u8 __percpu **hv_synic_eventring_tail; > > + > > +#endif /* _MSHV_ROOT_H_ */ > > > > It is used in mshv_synic.c in synic_event_ring_get_queued_port(): > > diff --git a/drivers/hv/mshv_synic.c b/drivers/hv/mshv_synic.c > new file mode 100644 > index 000000000000..e7782f92e339 > --- /dev/null > +++ b/drivers/hv/mshv_synic.c > @@ -0,0 +1,665 @@ > <snip> > +static u32 synic_event_ring_get_queued_port(u32 sint_index) > +{ > + struct hv_synic_event_ring_page **event_ring_page; > + volatile struct hv_synic_event_ring *ring; > + struct hv_synic_pages *spages; > + u8 **synic_eventring_tail; > + u32 message; > + u8 tail; > + > + spages = this_cpu_ptr(mshv_root.synic_pages); > + event_ring_page = &spages->synic_event_ring_page; > + synic_eventring_tail = (u8 **)this_cpu_ptr(hv_synic_eventring_tail); > + tail = (*synic_eventring_tail)[sint_index]; OK. I got it. Thanks. -- Thanks Tianyu Lan