On 2018/11/29 ??10:00, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:> On Thu, Nov 15, 2018 at 04:24:38PM +0800, Jason Wang wrote: >> On 2018/11/15 ??3:04, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: >>> On Thu, Nov 15, 2018 at 11:56:03AM +0800, jiangyiwen wrote: >>>> Hi Stefan, Michael, Jason and everyone, >>>> >>>> Several days ago, I discussed with jason about "Vsock over Virtio-net". >>>> This idea has two advantages: >>>> First, it can use many great features of virtio-net, like batching, >>>> mergeable rx buffer and multiqueue, etc. >>>> Second, it can reduce many duplicate codes and make it easy to be >>>> maintained. >>> I'm not sure I get the motivation. Which features of >>> virtio net are relevant to vsock? >> >> Vsock is just a L2 (and above) protocol from the view of the device. > I don't believe so. I think virtio-vsock operates at a transport level. > There is in theory a bit of network level but we don't really implement > it as it's only host to guest. I am not aware of any data link > functionality n virtio-vsock. virtio-vsock provides services such as > connection-oriented communication, reliability, flow control and > multiplexing.Ok, consider it doesn't implement L2, it's pretty fit for virtio-net I believe?> >> So I >> think we should answer the question why we need two different paths for >> networking traffic? Or what is the fundamental reason that makes vsock does >> not go for virtio-net? > So virtio-vsock ensures reliability.It's done at the level of protocol instead of virtio transport or virtio device.> If you want to compare it with > something that would be TCP or QUIC. The fundamental difference between > virtio-vsock and e.g. TCP is that TCP operates in a packet loss environment. > So they are using timers for reliability, and receiver is always free to > discard any unacked data.Virtio-net knows nothing above L2, so they are totally transparent to device itself. I still don't get why not using virtio-net instead. Thanks> > >> I agree they could be different type of devices but codes could be shared in >> both guest and host (or even qemu) for not duplicating features(bugs). >> >> Thanks >> >> >>> The ones that you mention >>> all seem to be mostly of use to the networking stack. >>> >>>
Michael S. Tsirkin
2018-Nov-30 12:52 UTC
[RFC] Discuss about an new idea "Vsock over Virtio-net"
On Fri, Nov 30, 2018 at 08:45:39PM +0800, Jason Wang wrote:> > On 2018/11/29 ??10:00, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: > > On Thu, Nov 15, 2018 at 04:24:38PM +0800, Jason Wang wrote: > > > On 2018/11/15 ??3:04, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: > > > > On Thu, Nov 15, 2018 at 11:56:03AM +0800, jiangyiwen wrote: > > > > > Hi Stefan, Michael, Jason and everyone, > > > > > > > > > > Several days ago, I discussed with jason about "Vsock over Virtio-net". > > > > > This idea has two advantages: > > > > > First, it can use many great features of virtio-net, like batching, > > > > > mergeable rx buffer and multiqueue, etc. > > > > > Second, it can reduce many duplicate codes and make it easy to be > > > > > maintained. > > > > I'm not sure I get the motivation. Which features of > > > > virtio net are relevant to vsock? > > > > > > Vsock is just a L2 (and above) protocol from the view of the device. > > I don't believe so. I think virtio-vsock operates at a transport level. > > There is in theory a bit of network level but we don't really implement > > it as it's only host to guest. I am not aware of any data link > > functionality n virtio-vsock. virtio-vsock provides services such as > > connection-oriented communication, reliability, flow control and > > multiplexing. > > > Ok, consider it doesn't implement L2, it's pretty fit for virtio-net I > believe? > > > > > > > So I > > > think we should answer the question why we need two different paths for > > > networking traffic? Or what is the fundamental reason that makes vsock does > > > not go for virtio-net? > > So virtio-vsock ensures reliability. > > > It's done at the level of protocol instead of virtio transport or virtio > device. > > > > If you want to compare it with > > something that would be TCP or QUIC. The fundamental difference between > > virtio-vsock and e.g. TCP is that TCP operates in a packet loss environment. > > So they are using timers for reliability, and receiver is always free to > > discard any unacked data. > > > Virtio-net knows nothing above L2, so they are totally transparent to device > itself. I still don't get why not using virtio-net instead. > > > ThanksIs your question why is virtio-vsock used instead of TCP on top of IP on top of virtio-net?> > > > > > > > I agree they could be different type of devices but codes could be shared in > > > both guest and host (or even qemu) for not duplicating features(bugs). > > > > > > Thanks > > > > > > > > > > The ones that you mention > > > > all seem to be mostly of use to the networking stack. > > > > > > > >
On 2018/11/30 ??8:52, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:>>> If you want to compare it with >>> something that would be TCP or QUIC. The fundamental difference between >>> virtio-vsock and e.g. TCP is that TCP operates in a packet loss environment. >>> So they are using timers for reliability, and receiver is always free to >>> discard any unacked data. >> Virtio-net knows nothing above L2, so they are totally transparent to device >> itself. I still don't get why not using virtio-net instead. >> >> >> Thanks > Is your question why is virtio-vsock used instead of TCP on top of IP > on top of virtio-net? > >No, my question is why not do vsock through virtio-net. Thanks
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