Re: [PATCH V2 mlx5-next 12/14] vfio/mlx5: Implement vfio_pci driver for mlx5 devices

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On 10/20/2021 2:04 AM, Jason Gunthorpe wrote:
On Tue, Oct 19, 2021 at 02:58:56PM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote:
I think that gives us this table:

|   NDMA   | RESUMING |  SAVING  |  RUNNING |
+----------+----------+----------+----------+ ---
|     X    |     0    |     0    |     0    |  ^
+----------+----------+----------+----------+  |
|     0    |     0    |     0    |     1    |  |
+----------+----------+----------+----------+  |
|     X    |     0    |     1    |     0    |
+----------+----------+----------+----------+  NDMA value is either compatible
|     0    |     0    |     1    |     1    |  to existing behavior or don't
+----------+----------+----------+----------+  care due to redundancy vs
|     X    |     1    |     0    |     0    |  !_RUNNING/INVALID/ERROR
+----------+----------+----------+----------+
|     X    |     1    |     0    |     1    |  |
+----------+----------+----------+----------+  |
|     X    |     1    |     1    |     0    |  |
+----------+----------+----------+----------+  |
|     X    |     1    |     1    |     1    |  v
+----------+----------+----------+----------+ ---
|     1    |     0    |     0    |     1    |  ^
+----------+----------+----------+----------+  Desired new useful cases
|     1    |     0    |     1    |     1    |  v
+----------+----------+----------+----------+ ---

Specifically, rows 1, 3, 5 with NDMA = 1 are valid states a user can
set which are simply redundant to the NDMA = 0 cases.
It seems right

Row 6 remains invalid due to lack of support for pre-copy (_RESUMING
| _RUNNING) and therefore cannot be set by userspace.  Rows 7 & 8
are error states and cannot be set by userspace.
I wonder, did Yishai's series capture this row 6 restriction? Yishai?


It seems so,  by using the below check which includes the !VFIO_DEVICE_STATE_VALID clause.

if (old_state == VFIO_DEVICE_STATE_ERROR ||
        !VFIO_DEVICE_STATE_VALID(state) ||
        (state & ~MLX5VF_SUPPORTED_DEVICE_STATES))
        return -EINVAL;

Which is:

#define VFIO_DEVICE_STATE_VALID(state) \
    (state & VFIO_DEVICE_STATE_RESUMING ? \
    (state & VFIO_DEVICE_STATE_MASK) == VFIO_DEVICE_STATE_RESUMING : 1)


Like other bits, setting the bit should be effective at the completion
of writing device state.  Therefore the device would need to flush any
outbound DMA queues before returning.
Yes, the device commands are expected to achieve this.

The question I was really trying to get to though is whether we have a
supportable interface without such an extension.  There's currently
only an experimental version of vfio migration support for PCI devices
in QEMU (afaik),
If I recall this only matters if you have a VM that is causing
migratable devices to interact with each other. So long as the devices
are only interacting with the CPU this extra step is not strictly
needed.

So, single device cases can be fine as-is

IMHO the multi-device case the VMM should probably demand this support
from the migration drivers, otherwise it cannot know if it is safe for
sure.

A config option to override the block if the admin knows there is no
use case to cause devices to interact - eg two NVMe devices without
CMB do not have a useful interaction.

so it seems like we could make use of the bus-master bit to fill
this gap in QEMU currently, before we claim non-experimental
support, but this new device agnostic extension would be required
for non-PCI device support (and PCI support should adopt it as
available).  Does that sound right?  Thanks,
I don't think the bus master support is really a substitute, tripping
bus master will stop DMA but it will not do so in a clean way and is
likely to be non-transparent to the VM's driver.

The single-device-assigned case is a cleaner restriction, IMHO.

Alternatively we can add the 4th bit and insist that migration drivers
support all the states. I'm just unsure what other HW can do, I get
the feeling people have been designing to the migration description in
the header file for a while and this is a new idea.

Jason

Just to be sure,

We refer here to some future functionality support with this extra 4th bit but it doesn't enforce any change in the submitted code, right ?

The below code uses the (state & ~MLX5VF_SUPPORTED_DEVICE_STATES) clause which fails any usage of a non-supported bit as of this one.

if (old_state == VFIO_DEVICE_STATE_ERROR ||
        !VFIO_DEVICE_STATE_VALID(state) ||
        (state & ~MLX5VF_SUPPORTED_DEVICE_STATES))
        return -EINVAL;

Yishai




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