Re: [PATCH v3 3/4] vdpa: show dev config as-is in "vdpa dev show" output

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On 10/27/2022 1:47 AM, Jason Wang wrote:
On Thu, Oct 27, 2022 at 2:31 PM Si-Wei Liu <si-wei.liu@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


On 10/25/2022 9:44 PM, Jason Wang wrote:
在 2022/10/26 09:10, Si-Wei Liu 写道:

On 10/24/2022 7:24 PM, Jason Wang wrote:
On Tue, Oct 25, 2022 at 3:14 AM Si-Wei Liu<si-wei.liu@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
On 10/24/2022 1:40 AM, Jason Wang wrote:
On Sat, Oct 22, 2022 at 7:49 AM Si-Wei Liu<si-wei.liu@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Live migration of vdpa would typically require re-instate vdpa
device with an idential set of configs on the destination node,
same way as how source node created the device in the first
place. In order to save orchestration software from memorizing
and keeping track of vdpa config, it will be helpful if the vdpa
tool provides the aids for exporting the initial configs as-is,
the way how vdpa device was created. The "vdpa dev show" command
seems to be the right vehicle for that. It is unlike the "vdpa dev
config show" command output which usually goes with the live value
in the device config space, and is not quite reliable subject to
the dynamics of feature negotiation or possible change by the
driver to the config space.

Examples:

1) Create vDPA by default without any config attribute

$ vdpa dev add mgmtdev pci/0000:41:04.2 name vdpa0
$ vdpa dev show vdpa0
vdpa0: type network mgmtdev pci/0000:41:04.2 vendor_id 5555
max_vqs 9 max_vq_size 256
$ vdpa dev -jp show vdpa0
{
       "dev": {
           "vdpa0": {
               "type": "network",
               "mgmtdev": "pci/0000:41:04.2",
               "vendor_id": 5555,
               "max_vqs": 9,
               "max_vq_size": 256,
           }
       }
}

2) Create vDPA with config attribute(s) specified

$ vdpa dev add mgmtdev pci/0000:41:04.2 name vdpa0 \
       mac e4:11:c6:d3:45:f0 max_vq_pairs 4
$ vdpa dev show
vdpa0: type network mgmtdev pci/0000:41:04.2 vendor_id 5555
max_vqs 9 max_vq_size 256
     initial_config: mac e4:11:c6:d3:45:f0 max_vq_pairs 4
$ vdpa dev -jp show
{
       "dev": {
           "vdpa0": {
               "type": "network",
               "mgmtdev": "pci/0000:41:04.2",
               "vendor_id": 5555,
               "max_vqs": 9,
               "max_vq_size": 256,
               "initial_config": {
                   "mac": "e4:11:c6:d3:45:f0",
                   "max_vq_pairs": 4
               }
           }
       }
}

Signed-off-by: Si-Wei Liu<si-wei.liu@xxxxxxxxxx>
---
    drivers/vdpa/vdpa.c | 39 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    1 file changed, 39 insertions(+)

diff --git a/drivers/vdpa/vdpa.c b/drivers/vdpa/vdpa.c
index bebded6..bfb8f54 100644
--- a/drivers/vdpa/vdpa.c
+++ b/drivers/vdpa/vdpa.c
@@ -677,6 +677,41 @@ static int
vdpa_nl_cmd_dev_del_set_doit(struct sk_buff *skb, struct
genl_info *i
    }

    static int
+vdpa_dev_initcfg_fill(struct vdpa_device *vdev, struct sk_buff
*msg, u32 device_id)
+{
+       struct vdpa_dev_set_config *cfg = &vdev->init_cfg;
+       int err = -EMSGSIZE;
+
+       if (!cfg->mask)
+               return 0;
+
+       switch (device_id) {
+       case VIRTIO_ID_NET:
+               if ((cfg->mask &
BIT_ULL(VDPA_ATTR_DEV_NET_CFG_MACADDR)) != 0 &&
+                   nla_put(msg, VDPA_ATTR_DEV_NET_CFG_MACADDR,
+                           sizeof(cfg->net.mac), cfg->net.mac))
+                       return err;
+               if ((cfg->mask &
BIT_ULL(VDPA_ATTR_DEV_NET_CFG_MTU)) != 0 &&
+                   nla_put_u16(msg, VDPA_ATTR_DEV_NET_CFG_MTU,
cfg->net.mtu))
+                       return err;
+               if ((cfg->mask &
BIT_ULL(VDPA_ATTR_DEV_NET_CFG_MAX_VQP)) != 0 &&
+                   nla_put_u16(msg, VDPA_ATTR_DEV_NET_CFG_MAX_VQP,
+ cfg->net.max_vq_pairs))
+                       return err;
+               break;
+       default:
+               break;
+       }
+
+       if ((cfg->mask & BIT_ULL(VDPA_ATTR_DEV_FEATURES)) != 0 &&
+           nla_put_u64_64bit(msg, VDPA_ATTR_DEV_FEATURES,
+                             cfg->device_features, VDPA_ATTR_PAD))
+               return err;
A question: If any of those above attributes were not provisioned,
should we show the ones that are inherited from the parent?
A simple answer would be yes, but the long answer is that I am not
sure
if there's any for the moment - there's no  default value for mtu,
mac,
and max_vqp that can be inherited from the parent (max_vqp by default
being 1 is spec defined, not something inherited from the parent).
Note that it is by default from driver level that if _F_MQ is not
negotiated. But I think we are talking about something different that
is out of the spec here, what if:

vDPA inherit _F_MQ but mqx_vqp is not provisioned via netlink.

Or is it not allowed?
My understanding is that this is not allowed any more since the
introduction of max_vqp attribute. Noted, currently we don't have a
way for vendor driver to report the default value for mqx_vqp,

I think it can be reported in this patch?
Yes, we can add, but I am not sure whether or not this will be
practically useful, for e.g. the same command without max_vqp specified
may render different number of queues across different devices, or
different revisions of the same vendor's devices. Does it complicate the
mgmt software even more, I'm not sure....
It depends on the use case, e.g if we want to compare the migration
compatibility, having a single vdpa command query is much easier than
having two or more.
Yep I agree. I was saying not very attribute would need to be inherited from the parent device. Actually attributes like max_vqp could take the default from some common place for e.g. some default value can be applied by vdpa core. And we can document these attributes ruled by vdpa core in vdpa-dev(8) man page. Reduce the extra call of having mgmt software issue another query command which actually doesn't need to.


Could we instead mandate
max_vqp to be 1 from vdpa core level if user doesn't explicitly specify
the value?
This seems to be not easy, at least not easy in the vDPA core.
We can load these default values from vdpa_nl_cmd_dev_add_set_doit() before ops->dev_add is called. I can post a v3 that shows the code, it shouldn't be too hard.

  We can
probably document this somewhere but max_vqp is only one example, we
have other mq devices like block/SCSI/console.
Actually max_vqp is a network device specific config to provision mq devices. If the parent mgmtdev supports net vdpa device creation and user requests to provision _F_MQ with no supplied max_vqp value, we should load some global default value there.


That way it is more consistent in terms of the resulting
number of queue pairs (=1) with the case where parent device does not
offer the _F_MQ feature.
Right, but a corner case is to provision _F_MQ but without max_vqp.
Yes, I will post the patch that supports this.


if not otherwise specified in the CLI. Without getting the default
value reported in 'vdpa mgmtdev show' level, it'd just confuse mgmt
software even more.

Yes, this is something that we need to fix. And what's more in order
to support dynamic provisioning, we need a way to report the number of
available instances that could be used for vDPA device provisioning.
Wouldn't it be possible to achieve that by simply checking how many
parent mgmtdev instances don't have vdpa device provisioned yet? e.g.

inuse=$(vdpa dev show | grep mgmtdev | wc -l)
total=$(vdpa mgmtdev show  | grep "supported_classes" | wc -l )
echo $((total - inuse))
I meant how many available vDPA devices that are available for the
mgmt to create?
Oh I see.


E.g in the case of sub function or simulator a mgmtdev can create more
than 1 vdpa devices.
Does the sub function today supports creation of multiple vDPA instance per mgmtdev? Something I wasn't aware of before. Is it with different device class?



    At least some time in the past, mlx5 were
enabled with MQ with 8 queue pairs by default.
That was the situation when there's no max_vqp attribute support from
vdpa netlink API level. I think now every driver honors the vdpa core
disposition to get a single queue pair if max_vqp config is missing.
So we have:

int vdpa_register_device(struct vdpa_device *vdev, int nvqs)

This means technically, parent can allocate a multiqueue devices with
_F_MQ features if max_vqp and device_features is not provisioned. And
what's more, what happens if _F_MQ is provisioned by max_vqp is not
specified?

The question is:

When a attribute is not specificed/provisioned via net link, what's
the default value? The answer should be consistent: if device_features
is determined by the parent, we should do the same for mqx_vqp.
OK I got your point.

And it looks to me all of those belongs to the initial config
(self-contained)
Right. I wonder if we can have vdpa core define the default value (for
e.g. max_vqp=1) for those unspecified attribute (esp. when the
corresponding device feature is offered and provisioned) whenever
possible. Which I think it'll be more consistent for the same command to
get to the same result between different vendor drivers. While we still
keep the possibility for future extension to allow driver override the
vdpa core disposition if the real use case emerges. What do you think?
That's possible but we may end up with device specific code in the
vDPA core which is not elegant, and the code will grow as the number
of supported types grows.
I guess that's unavoidable as this is already the case today. See various VIRTIO_ID_NET case switch in the vdpa.c code. I think type specific code just limits itself to the netlink API interfacing layer rather than down to the driver API, it might be just okay (as that's already the case).


Note that, max_vqp is not the only attribute that may suffer from
this, basically any config field that depends on a specific feature
bit may have the same issue.


And the mlx5_vdpa driver with 8 queue pairs in the wild days is just
irrelevant to be manageable by mgmt software, regardless of live
migration.
And
the device_features if inherited is displayed at 'vdpa dev config
show'
output. Can you remind me of a good example for inherited value
that we
may want to show here?
Some other cases:

1) MTU: there should be something that the device needs to report if
_F_MTU is negotiated even if it is not provisioned from netlink.
I am not sure I understand the ask here. Noted the QEMU argument has
to offer host_mtu=X with the maximum MTU value for guest to use (and
applied as the initial MTU config during virtio-net probing for Linux
driver),

Adding Cindy.

I think it's a known issue that we need to do sanity check to make
sure cli parameters matches what is provisioned from netlink.
Right. How's the plan for QEMU to get to the mtu provisioned by netlink,
via a new vhost-vdpa ioctl call?
I think netlink is not designed for qemu to use, the design is to
expose a vhost device to Qemu.

If so, will  QEMU be able to read it
directly from kernel when it comes to the vhost-vdpa backend, without
having user to specify host_mtu from CLI?
I'm not sure I get the question, but Qemu should get this via config
space (otherwise it should be a bug).
It's hard for QEMU to work this way with the existing get_config() ops I think, as it has assumption around endianness and feature negotiation, until the latter is done you can't get any reliable value for provisioned property. I think QEMU which need to validate the provisioned value way earlier (when QEMU is launched), before negotiation kicks in. It would be clearner to use another vhost and a new vdpa driver ops to retrieve the provisioned feature config values from vendor drivers.

  And Qemu need to verify the mtu
got from cli vs the mtu got from vhost and fail the device
initialization if they don't match.
I mean today there's a problem for double provisioning: for e.g. mtu has to be first provided in the 'vdpa dev add' command when to provision _F_MTU, in QEMU CLI the same value has to be supplied to host_mtu. The same applies to mac address. It would be the best we can allow QEMU load the provisioned value from vdpa device directly, without having to provide extra duplicated configs in QEMU CLI level.



and the way to get the parent device MTU and whether that's relevant
to vdpa device's MTU is very vendor specific.

So I think the max MTU of parent should be equal to the max MTU of the
vDPA.
Noted here the parent might not be necessarily the mgmtdev where vdpa
gets created over. It may well end up with the MTU on the PF (uplink
port) which the mgmt software has to concern with. My point is the
utility and tool chain able to derive the maximal MTU effectively
allowed for vDPA device may live out of vDPA's realm. It's a rare or
even invalid configuration to have vDPA configured with a bigger value
than the MTU on the uplink port or parent device. It's more common when
MTU config is involved, it has to be consistently configured across all
the network links along, from parent device (uplink port) down to the
switchdev representor port, vdpa device, and QEMU virtio-net object.
Ok, right.


I think we would need new attribute(s) in the mgmtdev level to
support what you want here?

Not sure, but what I want to ask is consider we provision MTU feature
but without max MTU value, do we need to report the initial max MTU here?
Yep, maybe. I'm not very sure if this will be very useful to be honest,
consider it's kinda a rare case to me were to provision MTU feature
without a specific MTU value. If one cares about MTU, mgmt software
should configure some mtu through "vdpa dev add ... mtu ...", no?
Yes, but this only works if all config fields could be provisioned,
which seems not the case now, vdpa_dev_set_config is currently a
subset of virtio_net_config. So this goes back to the question I
raised earlier. Is the time to switch to use virtio_net_config and
allow all fields to be provisioned?
Don't quite get how it will be useful if switching to virtio_net_config. I thought we can add the missing fields to vdpa_dev_set_config even now to make it match virtio_net_config. Though the reality is there's few vdpa device that supports those features now. If any real device supports feature field in virtio_net_config but not in vdpa_dev_set_config, it can be gradually added so long as needed.


And even for mtu we're lacking a way to report the maximum MTU allowed
by mgmt dev (e.g the uplink MTU via netlink):
Since MTU is only implemented in mlx5_vdpa by now except for simulators, copy Eli to see if this is feasible to implement in real device. I think we also need to validate that the mtu configured on vDPA device instance shouldn't exceed the uplink MTU (maximum MTU allowed).

1) report the maximum host mtu supported by the mgmtdev via netlink
(not done, so management needs to guess the maximum value now)
2) allow mtu to be provisioned (done)
3) show initial mtu (done by this patch)
So I wonder is it fine for vdpa core to come up with a default value for MTU when _F_MTU feature is to be provisioned or inherited? If we mandate each vDPA vendor to support at least the standard 1500 MTU for _F_MTU feature, we can make it default to 1500.

Otherwise the vDPA has to be taken (inherited) from the parent device. Unfortunately, right now for mlx5_vdpa, the parent mgmtdev device has 1500 MTU by default regardless of the MTU on the uplink port, and I'm not sure if it's a right model to enforce mgmtdev go with uplink port's MTU. I would need to hear what vendors say about this requirement.


We probably need to do the above for all fields to be self-contained.
Agreed on the part of being self-contained.


On the other hand, no mtu value specified may mean "go with what the
uplink port or parent device has". I think this is a pretty useful case
if the vendor's NIC supports updating MTU on the fly without having to
tear down QEMU and reconfigure vdpa. I'm not sure if we end up with
killing this use case by limiting initial max MTU to a fixed value.


2) device_features: if device_features is not provisioned, we should
still report it via netlink here
Not the way I expected it, but with Lingshan's series to expose
fields out of FEATURES_OK, the device_features is now reported
through 'vdpa dev config show' regardless being specified or not, if
I am not mistaken?

Yes.
Do you want me to relocate to 'vdpa dev show', or it's okay to leave it
behind there?
It's probably too late for the relocation but I feel it's better to
place all the initial/inherited attributes into a single command even
if some of them are already somewhere in another command, but we can
hear from others.
Ok, that'll be fine. I supposed mgmt software should only query through "mgmtdev show" or "dev show", avoiding any query via"dev config show". It'd be the best to get all of the compatibility related info consolidated in one single place. Let me try to include it in "dev show".



Currently we export the config attributes upon vdpa creation under
the "initial_config" key. If we want to expose more default values
inherited from mgmtdev, I think we can wrap up these default values
under another key "inherited_config" to display in 'vdpa dev show'
output. Does it fit what you have in mind?

I wonder if it's better to merge those two, or is there any advantages
of splitting them?
I think for the most part "initial_config" will be sufficient for those
config attributes with "vdpa dev add" equivalents, be it user specified,
vdpa enforced default if missing user input, or default overridden by
the parent device. "inherited_config" will be useful for the configs
with no "vdpa dev add" equivalent or live out side of vdpa tool, but
still important for mgmt software to replicate identical vdpa setup.
Like max-supported-mtu (for the uplink port or parent device),
effective-link-speed, effective-link-status et al. Let's see if there's
more when we get there.
So one point I can see is that, if there's no difference from the
userpsace perspective, we'd better merge them. And I don't see any
difference between the initial versus inherited from the view of user
space. Do you?
So the major difference is "initial_config" is settable and equivalent to the config attribute in "vdpa dev add" command, while "inherited_config" is the read-only fields from "mgmtdev show" that does not correspond to any "vdpa dev add" vdpa attribute. That way the mgmt software can use the "initial_config" directly to recreate vdpa with identical device config, while using the "inherited_config" to replicate the other configs out of vdpa, for e.g. set uplink port's MTU to 9000. Maybe there's no need to fold such info into an "inherited_config" key? though I just want to make it relevant to migration compatibility. Any suggestion for the name or layout?


Thanks,
-Siwei


Thanks

Thanks,
-Siwei


or do you mean the mgmt can assume it
should be the same as mgmtdev. Anyhow if we don't show device_features
if it is not provisioned, it will complicate the mgmt software.
Yes, as I said earlier, since the device_features attr getting added
to the 'vdpa dev config show' command, this divergence started to
complicate mgmt software already.

Thanks,

Thanks


-Siwei
Thanks

Thanks,
-Siwei


Thanks

+
+       return 0;
+}
+
+static int
    vdpa_dev_fill(struct vdpa_device *vdev, struct sk_buff *msg,
u32 portid, u32 seq,
                 int flags, struct netlink_ext_ack *extack)
    {
@@ -715,6 +750,10 @@ static int
vdpa_nl_cmd_dev_del_set_doit(struct sk_buff *skb, struct
genl_info *i
           if (nla_put_u16(msg, VDPA_ATTR_DEV_MIN_VQ_SIZE,
min_vq_size))
                   goto msg_err;

+       err = vdpa_dev_initcfg_fill(vdev, msg, device_id);
+       if (err)
+               goto msg_err;
+
           genlmsg_end(msg, hdr);
           return 0;

--
1.8.3.1


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