Greetings Laine,
> Sent: Wednesday, August 25, 2021 at 7:53 PM
> From: "Laine Stump" <laine at redhat.com>
> To: "daggs" <daggs at gmx.com>
> Cc: "Martin Kletzander" <mkletzan at redhat.com>,
libvirt-users at redhat.com
> Subject: Re: issues with vm after upgrade
>
> On 8/20/21 12:07 PM, daggs wrote:
> > Greetings Laine,
> >
> >> Sent: Monday, August 16, 2021 at 12:57 AM
> >> From: "Laine Stump" <laine at redhat.com>
> >> To: "daggs" <daggs at gmx.com>
> >> Cc: "Martin Kletzander" <mkletzan at redhat.com>,
libvirt-users at redhat.com
> >> Subject: Re: issues with vm after upgrade
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> On 8/14/21 6:05 AM, daggs wrote:
> >>> Greetings Martin,
> >>>
> >>>> Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2021 at 2:07 PM
> >>>> From: "daggs" <daggs at gmx.com>
> >>>> To: "Martin Kletzander" <mkletzan at
redhat.com>
> >>>> Cc: dan at berrange.com, libvirt-users at redhat.com
> >>>> Subject: Re: issues with vm after upgrade
> >>>>
> >>>>> Sent: Thursday, August 12, 2021 at 11:49 AM
> >>>>> From: "Martin Kletzander" <mkletzan at
redhat.com>
> >>>>> To: "daggs" <daggs at gmx.com>
> >>>>> Cc: dan at berrange.com, libvirt-users at redhat.com
> >>>>> Subject: Re: issues with vm after upgrade
> >>>>>
> >>>>> On Wed, Aug 11, 2021 at 08:53:10PM +0200, daggs wrote:
> >>>>>> Greetings Martin,
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>> Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2021 at 6:08 PM
> >>>>>>> From: "daggs" <daggs at
gmx.com>
> >>>>>>> To: "Martin Kletzander" <mkletzan
at redhat.com>
> >>>>>>> Cc: dan at berrange.com, libvirt-users at
redhat.com
> >>>>>>> Subject: Re: issues with vm after upgrade
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> Greetings Martin,
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2021 at 4:13
PM
> >>>>>>>> From: "Martin Kletzander"
<mkletzan at redhat.com>
> >>>>>>>> To: "daggs" <daggs at
gmx.com>
> >>>>>>>> Cc: dan at berrange.com, libvirt-users at
redhat.com
> >>>>>>>> Subject: Re: issues with vm after upgrade
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> On Wed, Aug 11, 2021 at 03:09:34PM +0200,
daggs wrote:
> >>>>>>>>> Greetings Martin,
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2021
at 10:14 AM
> >>>>>>>>>> From: "Martin
Kletzander" <mkletzan at redhat.com>
> >>>>>>>>>> To: "daggs" <daggs at
gmx.com>
> >>>>>>>>>> Cc: dan at berrange.com,
libvirt-users at redhat.com
> >>>>>>>>>> Subject: Re: issues with vm after
upgrade
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>> [...]
> >>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> 2) To your issue with starting the
domain it would be good to know what
> >>>>>>>>>> is the error you get from
virsh (or however you are starting the
> >>>>>>>>>> domain) and the debug logs
of libvirtd, ideally just for the part of
> >>>>>>>>>> the domain starting.
> >>>>>>>>> that is the issue, there wasn't
any error. the vm just didn't booted.
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> Oh, so I misunderstood. What was the
state of the VM in libvirt?
> >>>>>>>> "paused" or "running"?
Was there serial console working?
> >>>>>>> it was marked as running and there was no
serial
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>> That's a pity we could not examine what was
actually happening.
> >>>>>
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>> I can diff the original xml with the
new one to see the diffs and post them here if you wish
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> Would be nice to see if there are any
differences. The newly created
> >>>>>>>> one works then?
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> I'll sent it later today
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> here: https://dpaste.com/5VBUU8Z9W
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Unfortunately there are many differences there. The
machine type
> >>>>> changes _something_ in qemu, there is different PCI(e)
topology, and I
> >>>>> do not think I will be able to figure this out without
the non-working
> >>>>> machine.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> So if your current setup works for you right now
I'd leave figuring out
> >>>>> the previous issue to others, if there is anyone
wanting to figure out
> >>>>> if there is some libvirt issue.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Have a nice day
> >>>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> my current setup works beside the hdmi audio, this I still
need to investigate.
> >>>>
> >>>> thanks for your help.
> >>>>
> >>>> Dagg
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>> just to update, I've solved the sound issue, frankly, I
don't understand how the guest showed a soundcard in the first place.
> >>> from what I gather, libvirt sets the -nodefaults flag to
prepare the vm's properties from scratch.
> >>> in this situation, the sound card is a function in the host
machine's pci tree.
> >>> when libvirt created the pci tree for the guest, it placed the
card as a function of a device as well, in my case 02:00.2
> >>> however it didn't created a device at 02:00.0.
> >>
> >> Are you basing this claim on the libvirt XML? Or on what you see
with
> >> lspci in the guest?
> >>
> >> When libvirt is assigning PCI addresses to devices in a guest, it
will
> >> never auto-assign a non-0 function. This will only happen if the
user
> >> explicitly requests it (and even then, iirc, libvirt should
generate an
> >> error if function 0 of the same slot has no device - something to
the
> >> effect of "no device on function 0 of a multifunction
device").
> >>
> >> Anyway, when I looked back at the XML diff you posted earlier (see
> >> below), I didn't see any hostdev device assigned to 02:00.2.
What I
> >> *did* see was that in both the old and the new version of the
diff, the
> >> hostdev devices were assigned to function 0 of different *slots*
on a
> >> dmi-to-pci-bridge controller, which should cause no problems
(unless
> >> there is a bug in QEMU's dmi-to-pci-bridge). (The important
thing,
> >> though, is that there is no hostdev device on a non-0 function,
and when
> >> it is on a non-0 slot, that's because it's on a
dmi-to-pci-bridge (which
> >> has 32 slots).
>
> > I saw it in guest,
>
> But I didn't see it in the XML diffs that you had posted.
as mentioned below, here is the xml of the new vm but with the sound problem:
https://dpaste.com/BB9EDY6BK
the relevant entry is at https://dpaste.com/BB9EDY6BK#line-130
you can see that the bdf is 08:01.0, note that there is no device defined at
08:00.0.
I may be wrong and there is no need for such device but if I run lspci on both
my linux system, I don't see device with such scenario.
note that the new vm was created using virt-manager, so the address wasn't
allocated by me
>
> > I'd assume that if libvirt defines a device on a specific bdf, the
guest will not change it.
>
> That's not exactly true - the bus "number" in libvirt
isn't given to
> qemu as an actual number, but as an alphanumeric device id (called
> "alias name" in libvirt XML). QEMU doesn't have any concept
of "bus
> number", because (afaiu) there is no way to convey such info to the
> guest firmware/OS; instead, QEMU creates a topology of interconnected
> controllers, the firmware and/or OS traverses this topology and assigns
> numbers to the encountered controllers as it sees fit.
so bottom line, libvirt defines the "order" of he device and qemu
creates however he wants but maintains libvirt's "order"?
>
> So you may have PCI controllers with indexes 1, 2, and 3 in your libvirt
> config, but those will be described on the QEMU commandline as
> controllers "pcie.1", "pcie.2", and "pcie.3":
>
> -device
>
pcie-root-port,port=0x8,chassis=1,id=pci.1,bus=pcie.0,multifunction=on,addr=0x1
> \
> -device pcie-root-port,port=0x9,chassis=2,id=pci.2,bus=pcie.0,addr=0x1.0x1
\
> -device pcie-root-port,port=0xa,chassis=3,id=pci.3,bus=pcie.0,addr=0x1.0x2
\
>
> and when a PCI device is attached to one of these controllers, the QEMU
> commandline uses the id name of the controller, not a bus number:
>
> -device vfio-pci,host=0000:05:00.0,bus=pci.1,multifunction=on,addr=0x0 \
> -device vfio-pci,host=0000:05:00.1,id=hostdev1,bus=pci.1,addr=0x0.0x1 \
>
> It is a nice coincidence that the OSes I've seen happen to traverse the
> PCI topology in a manner that results in the guest OS numbering the
> buses the same as they are numbered in libvirt XML that has had PCI
> addresses auto-assigned by libvirt, but it is trivial to make this *not*
> happen. For example, if you changed the config so that the bus with
> index='2' (pcie.2) was attached to pcie.0, addr=0x1.0x1 (i.e.
change its
> PCI address to <address type='pci' bus='0'
slot='1' function='1'/>" ,
> and the bus with index='3' was attached to pcie.0, addr=0x1.0x2,
then
> the guest would number "pcie.2" as bus 1, and "pcie.1"
as bus 2.
>
> And of course the guest OS is free to traverse the controller topology
> in any manner it wants, so the bus numbering in the guest could be
> different even if the libvirt-generated QEMU commandline was the same.
>
> *HOWEVER*, slot (device) and function number are specified on the QEMU
> commandline numerically, and they will appear in the guest exactly as
> they are in the libvirt XML.
>
>
>
> > infact, over the last 10 years I've booted thousand of systems
both bare metal and visualized and never encountered such scenario.
> > that said, it might be a bug in qemu. >
> > what I did saw is that on the old vm in guest, after the upgrade the
sound card was defined as a function of the scsi virtblk controller and the new
vm placed
> > it as a function of non existent device.
>
> I would be very interested in seeing the libvirt XML, QEMU commandline,
> and guest-side output of "lspci" for this. I can't think of
any way this
> could happen without a serious bug *somewhere* (or manual intervention
> in the PCI addresses in the guest).
of the system with the sound issue? if so, I'll need to digg in my logs, the
most problematic part is the guest lspci
>
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> On the topic of having a dmi-to-pci-bridge show up in your XML: I
don't
> >> remember what versions the changes were in (it was at least a year
or
> >> two ago), but only a fairly old version of libvirt woud do that -
1)
> >> recent libvirt will assume that any hostdev PCI device is a PCIe
device,
> >> so it will add a pcie-root-port and assign the hostdev device to
slot 0
> >> of that root-port, and even before that 2) we switched from using
> >> dmi-to-pci-bridge to using pcie-to-pci-bridge quite some time ago
as well.
> > as stated in the original mail, the issue started after a major
version upgrade of both libvirt and qemu,
> > I'm currently using latest stable afaik.
>
> Right. If your guest was defined the first time using a much older
> libvirt, then devices would have been assigned to an auto-created
> dmi-to-pci-bridge at that time, and if you don't change (or remove) the
> PCI addresses of the devices or the bridge, then that will all be
> maintained whenever you restart the guest, ragardless of libvirt
> upgrades. But this again points out that the guest-side PCI addresses
> (which are determined by the PCI addresses in the libvirt config) should
> not change when upgrading libvirt (NOTE: 1) libvirt will only
> auto-assign a new PCI address to a device if it doesn't already have a
> PCI address assigned to it, and 2) libvirt *never* auto-assigns a non-0
> function except when adding a pcie-root-port (and in that case it will
> always first assign something to function 0))
then I wonder how the upgrade broke the system, in contrast, the other vm
I'm running (router with 5 nics in pt) worked out of the box
>
>
> >
> >>
> >> So if you're generating new XML based on config that
doesn't have pci
> >> controllers already in it, and you're seeing hostdevs (or any
other PCI
> >> devices) assigned to an automatically-added dmi-to-pci-bridge,
then your
> >> libvirt version is severely out of date.
> > here are the version I'm using:
> > # emerge --search app-emulation/libvirt app-emulation/qemu
> >
> > [ Results for search key : app-emulation/libvirt ]
> > Searching...
> >
> > * app-emulation/libvirt
> > Latest version available: 7.5.0
> > Latest version installed: 7.5.0
> > Size of files: 9749 KiB
> > Homepage: https://www.libvirt.org/
https://gitlab.com/libvirt/libvirt/
> > Description: C toolkit to manipulate virtual machines
> > License: LGPL-2.1
> >
> > [ Applications found : 1 ]
> >
> >
> > [ Results for search key : app-emulation/qemu ]
> > Searching...
> >
> > * app-emulation/qemu
> > Latest version available: 6.0.0-r52
> > Latest version installed: 6.0.0-r52
> > Size of files: 22724 KiB
> > Homepage: http://www.qemu.org http://www.linux-kvm.org
> > Description: QEMU + Kernel-based Virtual Machine userland
tools
> > License: GPL-2 LGPL-2 BSD-2
> >
> > [ Applications found : 1 ]
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> On 8/11/21 2:53 PM, daggs wrote:
> >> >> From: "daggs" <daggs at gmx.com>
> >> >>> From: "Martin Kletzander" <mkletzan at
redhat.com>
> >> >>> On Wed, Aug 11, 2021 at 03:09:34PM +0200, daggs
wrote:
> >> >>>> I can diff the original xml with the new one to
see the diffs and
> >> post them here if you wish
> >> >>>>
> >> >>>
> >> >>> Would be nice to see if there are any differences.
The newly created
> >> >>> one works then?
> >> >>
> >> >> I'll sent it later today
> >> >>
> >> >
> >> > here: https://dpaste.com/5VBUU8Z9W
> >>
> >>
> >>> my fix was to move the device to 00:1f.4 in the guest.
> >>
> >> That's an interesting choice :-). You could have just put it
on function
> >> 0 of some other unused slot (or a non-0 function of the slot the
GPU is
> >> assigned to). 00:1f is used for integrated devices on the Q35
chipset -
> >> it's nice that QEMU's emulation code was written to
allowing adding more
> >> devices on that slot, but I wouldn't have been surprised if it
had
> >> caused problems...
> > 10 years of working in a virtualization company has taught me that
somethings, keeping the pci structure close as much as possible
> > to the original is the best way to go.
> > that is why I chose it a s func, it is a func on the host mahcine.
>
> It wasn't a function of a slot that also contains integrated chipset
> devices though.... Oh, wait. According to the XML you reference down
> below, it looks like the audio device you're assigning to the guest *is
> itself* integrated on the chipset of the host, is that right?
>
> (It's interesting that this function of slot 1F is apparently in a
> different IOMMU group than the other functions of slot 1F. I would have
> guessed they would all be in the same IOMMU group, resulting in an
> inability to assign this one function to the guest without at least
> disabling the other devices on slot 1F (by binding them to the vfio-pci
> driver)
I'm using the pcie acs override patch to split the soundcard and the nic as
they belong in different vms.
>
> >
> >>
> >>
> >>> I won't be surprised this was the issue why the vm
didn't booted after the upgrade with the old xml.
> >>
> >> Well, if your XML had a device assigned to a non-0 function of a
slot
> >> and no device in function 0 of that slot, it would have failed to
work
> >> previously as well (my recollection is that in this case it's
more a
> >> problem of the guest OS not probing non-0 functions when there is
> >> nothing on function 0, and not with anything done by QEMU).
> >>
> >>
> > here is the xml of the machine after I've recreated it, it worked
but no sound: https://dpaste.com/BB9EDY6BK
> > I used virt-manager. note that the sound card pt is placed as a func
in bus 0x8 which doesn't exists.
>
> This doesn't show any devices assigned to non-0 functions in the guest
> (which is the part of what you said in previous messages that sounded
> wrong to me). (except for the SATA controller, which is listed in the
> libvirt config only for informational purposes, as it is hardcoded into
> the basic q35 virtual machine and can't be removed).
>
> What is does show is that there is a device a 00:1F.3 *on the host* that
> is being assigned to 08:01.00 (slot 1, function 0 of the
> pcie-pci-bridge) in the guest. I'm guessing this is the audio device?
> Also in this version of the XML, there is no longer a dmi-to-pci-bridge,
> but there is instead a pcie-to-pci-bridge, implying that you've
> redefined the guest config, resulting in PCI address auto-assignment
> being re-run (at least relative to the config you referenced last week
> that had a dmi-to-pci-bridge).
>
> It's possible that the audio device's driver just doesn't like
the
> device being on a standard PCI (i.e. non-PCIe) slot in the guest
> somehow, since it's a chipset-integrated PCIe device on the host. I
> haven't heard of that being the case in the past, but it's
possible.
>
>
> Anyway, at this point I've lost track of all the changes that have
> happened (your update entailed much more than just updating the libvirt
> package - your guest config was also changed/redefined) so I don't know
> how much more effort should be expended with post-mortem, especially
> since you now have it working. One thing that I would note is that we
> should probably be auto-assigning integrated chipset devices to
> pcie-root-ports rather than to a pci-bridge (I thought we already did
> that, but I can see how we might not).
>
>
I'll try to sum it up, prior to upgrade, both vms worked.
after the upgrade, only the router vm worked, the streamer one started and never
ran,
I've started experimenting with qemu cmdline invocation, I've got to a
situation where the vm was up and running with every thing defined beside the
nic link active.
this lead me to believe that the issue is with my config.
I've tried to downgrade to previous versions however the vm still didn't
booted.
I've then reached the assumption that following the upgrade, the vm's
xml was changed. because I didn't had the previous xml, I cannot verify.
my next step was to recreate the vm's xml using virt-manager under the
assumption that new config defined by virt-manager will work.
that was partially correct, after the recreation was completed, the vm booted
however the hdmi sound wasn't found.
this sent me back to the qemu cmdline as I had a working cmd line invocation.
I've started adding and removing entries from the generated qemu line to the
working cmd and found out that the issue was caused because of the -nodefaults
switch in qemu.
this lead me to inspect the pci tree created and found out that in my working
scenario, the sound card was placed in 00:02.0 and in the malfunctioning
scenario, the sound card was placed at 02:01.0 (got screen shots of it)
this lead me to the conclusion that the pci config might cause it, moving it to
1f.x worked
Thanks,
Dagg