On Thu, Feb 04, 2021 at 01:02:51PM +0100, Niklas Schnelle wrote: > > > On 2/4/21 11:40 AM, Greg Kroah-Hartman wrote: > > On Thu, Feb 04, 2021 at 10:43:53AM +0100, Niklas Schnelle wrote: > >> The global UID uniqueness attribute exposes whether the platform > >> guarantees that the user-defined per-device UID attribute values > >> (/sys/bus/pci/device/<dev>/uid) are unique and can thus be used as > >> a global identifier for the associated PCI device. With this commit > >> it is exposed at /sys/bus/pci/zpci/unique_uids > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Niklas Schnelle <schnelle@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >> --- > >> Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-pci | 9 +++++++++ > >> drivers/pci/pci-sysfs.c | 21 +++++++++++++++++++++ > >> 2 files changed, 30 insertions(+) > >> > >> diff --git a/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-pci b/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-pci > >> index 25c9c39770c6..812dd9d3f80d 100644 > >> --- a/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-pci > >> +++ b/Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-bus-pci > >> @@ -375,3 +375,12 @@ Description: > >> The value comes from the PCI kernel device state and can be one > >> of: "unknown", "error", "D0", D1", "D2", "D3hot", "D3cold". > >> The file is read only. > >> +What: /sys/bus/pci/zpci/unique_uids > > > > No blank line before this new line? > > Good catch, thanks! > > > > > And why "zpci"? > > There doesn't seem to be a precedent for arch specific attributes under > /sys/bus/pci so I went with a separate group for the RFC. Why? There's nothing arch-specific here, right? Either the file is present or not. > "zpci" since that's what we've been calling the s390 specific PCI. > I'm not attached to that name or having a separate group, from > my perspective /sys/bus/pci/unique_uids would actually be ideal > if Bjorn is okay with that, we don't currently foresee any additional > global attributes and no one else seems to have them but > one never knows and a separate group would then of course, > well group them. Why not just a simple file, no need for arch-specific names if this really can show up under other arches? > >> +Date: February 2021 > >> +Contact: Niklas Schnelle <schnelle@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> > >> +Description: > >> + This attribute exposes the global state of UID Uniqueness on an > >> + s390 Linux system. If this file contains '1' the per-device UID > >> + attribute is guaranteed to provide a unique user defined > >> + identifier for that PCI device. If this file contains '0' UIDs > >> + may collide and do not provide a unique identifier. > > > > What are they "colliding" with? And where does the UID come from, the > > device itself or somewhere else? > > If this attribute is 0 multiple PCI devices seen by Linux may have the same UID i.e. > they may collide with each other on the same Linux instance. So can't userspace figure this out on its own? > The > UIDs are exposed under /sys/bus/pci/devices/<dev>/uid. Even if the attribute is 1 > multiple Linux instances will often see the same UID. The main use case > we currently envision is naming PCI based network interfaces "eno<UID>" > which of course only works if the UIDs are unique for that Linux. > On the same mainframe multiple Linux instances may then e.g. use the same > UID for VFs from the same physical PCI network card or different cards > but the same physical network all defined by an administrator/management > system. > > The UIDs come from the platform/firmware/hypervisor and are provided > for each device by the CLP List PCI Functions "instruction" that is used > on s390x where an OS can't probe the physical PCI bus but instead > that is done by firmware. On QEMU/KVM they can be set on the QEMU cli, > on our machine hypervisor they are defined by the machine administrator/management > software as part of the definition of VMs/Partitions on that mainframe which includes > everything from the number of CPUs, memory, I/O devices etc. With the exposed UID uniqueness > attribute the platform then certifies that it will ensure that a UID is set to > a unique non-zero value. I can of course add more of this explanation > in the documentation too. Please explain it more, but why would userspace care about this? If userspace sees a UID "collision" then it just adds something else to the end of the name to make it unique. What is it supposed to do differently based on the value/presense of this file? > Both the uniqueness guarantee (this attribute) as well as the UIDs themselves > are part of the Z (s390x) architecture so fall under the mainframe typical > backwards compatibility considerations. So what can userspace do with this? What tool is going to rely on this? thanks, greg k-h