Hi gengdongjiu, On 08/03/18 06:18, gengdongjiu wrote: > Hi James, > sorry for my late response due to chines new year. Happy new year, > 2018-02-16 1:55 GMT+08:00 James Morse <james.morse@xxxxxxx>: >> On 12/02/18 10:19, gengdongjiu wrote: >>> On 2018/2/10 1:44, James Morse wrote: >>>> The point? We can't know what a CPU without the RAS extensions puts in there. >>>> >>>> Why Does this matter? When migrating a pending SError we have to know the >>>> difference between 'use this 64bit value', and 'the CPU will generate it'. >>>> If I make an SError pending with ESR=0 on a CPU with VSESR, I can't migrated to >>>> a system that generates an impdef SError-ESR, because I can't know it will be 0. >> >>> For the target system, before taking the SError, no one can know whether its syndrome value >>> is IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED or architecturally defined. >> >> For a virtual-SError, the hypervisor knows what it generated. (do I have >> VSESR_EL2? What did I put in there?). >> >> >>> when the virtual SError is taken, the ESR_ELx.IDS will be updated, then we can know >>> whether the ESR value is impdef or architecturally defined. >> >> True, the guest can't know anything about a pending virtual SError until it >> takes it. Why is this a problem? >> >> >>> It seems migration is only allowed only when target system and source system all support >>> RAS extension, because we do not know whether its syndrome is IMPLEMENTATION DEFINED or >>> architecturally defined. >> >> I don't think Qemu allows migration between hosts with differing guest-ID >> registers. But we shouldn't depend on this, and we may want to hide the v8.2 RAS >> features from the guest's ID register, but still use them from the host. >> >> The way I imagined it working was we would pack the following information into >> that events struct: >> { >> bool serror_pending; >> bool serror_has_esr; >> u64 serror_esr; >> } > > I have used your suggestion struct Ah! This is where it came from. Sorry, this was just to illustrate the information/sizes we wanted to transfer.... I didn't mean it literally. I should have said "64 bits of ESR, so that we can transfer anything that is added to VSESR_EL2 in the future, a flag somewhere to indicate an serror is pending, and another flag to indicate the ESR has a value we should use". Thanks/Sorry! James >> The problem I was trying to describe is because there is no value of serror_esr >> we can use to mean 'Ignore this, I'm a v8.0 CPU'. VSESR_EL2 is a 64bit register, >> any bits we abuse may get a meaning we want to use in the future. >> >> When it comes to migration, v8.{0,1} systems can only GET/SET events where >> serror_has_esr == false, they can't use the serror_esr. On v8.2 systems we >> should require serror_has_esr to be true. > yes, I agreed. > >> >> If we need to support migration from v8.{0,1} to v8.2, we can make up an impdef >> serror_esr. > > For the Qemu migration, I need to check more the QEMU code. > Hi Andrew, > I use KVM_GET/SET_VCPU_EVENTS IOCTL to migrate the Serror > exception status of VM, > The even struct is shown below: > > { > bool serror_pending; > bool serror_has_esr; > u64 serror_esr; > } > > Only when the target machine is armv8.2, it needs to set the > serror_esr(SError Exception Syndrome Register). > for the armv8.0, software can not set the serror_esr(SError Exception > Syndrome Register). > so when migration from v8.{0,1} to v8.2, QEMU should make up an impdef > serror_esr for the v8.2 target. > can you give me some suggestion how to set that register in the QEMU? > I do not familar with the QEMU migration. > Thanks very much. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-doc" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html