On Mon, 2 Nov 2020, Sean Christopherson wrote: > On Fri, Oct 02, 2020 at 01:48:10PM -0700, Vipin Sharma wrote: > > On Fri, Sep 25, 2020 at 03:22:20PM -0700, Vipin Sharma wrote: > > > I agree with you that the abstract name is better than the concrete > > > name, I also feel that we must provide HW extensions. Here is one > > > approach: > > > > > > Cgroup name: cpu_encryption, encryption_slots, or memcrypt (open to > > > suggestions) > > > > > > Control files: slots.{max, current, events} > > I don't particularly like the "slots" name, mostly because it could be confused > with KVM's memslots. Maybe encryption_ids.ids.{max, current, events}? I don't > love those names either, but "encryption" and "IDs" are the two obvious > commonalities betwee TDX's encryption key IDs and SEV's encryption address > space IDs. > Looping Janosch and Christian back into the thread. I interpret this suggestion as encryption.{sev,sev_es,keyids}.{max,current,events} for AMD and Intel offerings, which was my thought on this as well. Certainly the kernel could provide a single interface for all of these and key value pairs depending on the underlying encryption technology but it seems to only introduce additional complexity in the kernel in string parsing that can otherwise be avoided. I think we all agree that a single interface for all encryption keys or one-value-per-file could be done in the kernel and handled by any userspace agent that is configuring these values. I think Vipin is adding a root level file that describes how many keys we have available on the platform for each technology. So I think this comes down to, for example, a single encryption.max file vs encryption.{sev,sev_es,keyid}.max. SEV and SEV-ES ASIDs are provisioned separately so we treat them as their own resource here. So which is easier? $ cat encryption.sev.max 10 $ echo -n 15 > encryption.sev.max or $ cat encryption.max sev 10 sev_es 10 keyid 0 $ echo -n "sev 10" > encryption.max I would argue the former is simplest (always preferring one-value-per-file) and avoids any string parsing or resource controller lookups that need to match on that string in the kernel. The set of encryption.{sev,sev_es,keyid} files that exist would depend on CONFIG_CGROUP_ENCRYPTION and whether CONFIG_AMD_MEM_ENCRYPT or CONFIG_INTEL_TDX is configured. Both can be configured so we have all three files, but the root file will obviously indicate 0 keys available for one of them (can't run on AMD and Intel at the same time :). So I'm inclined to suggest that the one-value-per-file format is the ideal way to go unless there are objections to it.