On 3/30/17 9:13 AM, Leon Romanovsky wrote:
On Thu, Mar 30, 2017 at 02:12:21PM +0300, Marcel Apfelbaum wrote:
From: Yuval Shaia <yuval.shaia@xxxxxxxxxx>
Hi,
General description
===================
This is a very early RFC of a new RoCE emulated device
that enables guests to use the RDMA stack without having
a real hardware in the host.
The current implementation supports only VM to VM communication
on the same host.
Down the road we plan to make possible to be able to support
inter-machine communication by utilizing physical RoCE devices
or Soft RoCE.
The goals are:
- Reach fast and secure loos-less Inter-VM data exchange.
- Support remote VMs or bare metal machines.
- Allow VMs migration.
- Do not require to pin all VM memory.
Objective
=========
Have a QEMU implementation of the PVRDMA device. We aim to do so without
any change in the PVRDMA guest driver which is already merged into the
upstream kernel.
RFC status
===========
The project is in early development stages and supports
only basic send/receive operations.
We present it so we can get feedbacks on design,
feature demands and to receive comments from the
community pointing us to the "right" direction.
If to judge by the feedback which you got from RDMA community
for kernel proposal [1], this community failed to understand:
1. Why do you need new module?
In this case, this is a qemu module to allow qemu to provide a virt rdma
device to guests that is compatible with the device provided by VMWare's
ESX product. Right now, the vmware_pvrdma driver works only when the
guest is running on a VMWare ESX server product, this would change that.
Marcel mentioned that they are currently making it compatible because
that's the easiest/quickest thing to do, but in the future they might
extend beyond what VMWare's virt rdma driver provides/uses and might
then need to either modify it to work with their extensions or fork and
create their own virt client driver.
2. Why existing solutions are not enough and can't be extended?
This patch is against the qemu source code, not the kernel. There is no
other solution in the qemu source code, so there is no existing solution
to extend.
3. Why RXE (SoftRoCE) can't be extended to perform this inter-VM
communication via virtual NIC?
Eventually they want this to work on real hardware, and to be more or
less transparent to the guest. They will need to make it independent of
the kernel hardware/driver in use. That means their own virt driver,
then the virt driver will eventually hook into whatever hardware is
present on the system, or failing that, fall back to soft RoCE or soft
iWARP if that ever makes it in the kernel.
Can you please help us to fill this knowledge gap?
[1] http://marc.info/?l=linux-rdma&m=149063626907175&w=2
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