On Fri, Nov 01, 2024 at 10:11:11AM +0800, Jason Wang wrote: > On Fri, Nov 1, 2024 at 9:54 AM <qiang4.zhang@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > From: Qiang Zhang <qiang4.zhang@xxxxxxxxx> > > > > Virtio core unconditionally reset and restore status for all virtio > > devices before calling restore method. This breaks some virtio drivers > > which don't need to do anything in suspend and resume because they > > just want to keep device state retained. > > The challenge is how can driver know device doesn't need rest. Hi, Per my understanding to PM, in the suspend flow, device drivers need to 1. First manage/stop accesses from upper level software and 2. Store the volatile context into in-memory data structures. 3. Put devices into some low power (suspended) state. The resume process does the reverse. If a device context won't loose after entering some low power state (optional), it's OK to skip step 2. For virtio devices, spec doesn't define whether their states will lost after platform entering suspended state. So to work with different hypervisors, virtio drivers typically trigger a reset in suspend/resume flow. This works fine for virtio devices if following conditions are met: - Device state can be totally recoverable. - There isn't any working behaviour expected in suspended state, i.e. the suspended state should be sub-state of reset. However, the first point may be hard to implement from driver side for some devices. The second point may be unacceptable for some kind of devices. For your question, for devices whose suspended state is alike reset state, the hypervisor have the flexibility to retain its state or not, kernel driver can unconditionally reset it with proper re-initialization to accomplish better compatibility. For others, hypervisor *must* retain device state and driver just keeps using it. > > For example, PCI has no_soft_reset which has been done in the commit > "virtio: Add support for no-reset virtio PCI PM". > > And there's a ongoing long discussion of adding suspend support in the > virtio spec, then driver know it's safe to suspend/resume without > reset. That's great! Hopefully it can fill the gap. Currently, I think we can safely move the reset to drivers' freeze methods, virtio core has no reason to take it as a common action required by all devices. And the reset operation can be optional skipped if driver have hints from device that it can retain state. > > > > > Virtio GPIO is a typical example. GPIO states should be kept unchanged > > after suspend and resume (e.g. output pins keep driving the output) and > > Virtio GPIO driver does nothing in freeze and restore methods. But the > > reset operation in virtio_device_restore breaks this. > > Is this mandated by GPIO or virtio spec? If yes, let's quote the revelant part. No. But in actual hardware design (e.g. Intel PCH GPIO), or from the requirement perspective, GPIO pin state can be (should support) retained in suspended state. If Virtio GPIO is used to let VM operate such physical GPIO chip indirectly, it can't be reset in suspend and resume. Meanwhile the hypervisor will retain pin states after suspension. > > > > > Since some devices need reset in suspend and resume while some needn't, > > create a new helper function for the original reset and status restore > > logic so that virtio drivers can invoke it in their restore method > > if necessary. > > How are those drivers classified? I think this depends whether hypervisor will keep devices state in platform suspend process. I think hypervisor should because suspend and reset are conceptually two different things. Thanks Qiang