On Thu, Dec 1, 2022 at 8:53 AM Si-Wei Liu <si-wei.liu at oracle.com>
wrote:>
> Sorry for getting back late due to the snag of the holidays.
No worries :)
>
> On 11/23/2022 11:13 PM, Jason Wang wrote:
> > On Thu, Nov 24, 2022 at 6:53 AM Si-Wei Liu <si-wei.liu at
oracle.com> wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >> On 11/22/2022 7:35 PM, Jason Wang wrote:
> >>> On Wed, Nov 23, 2022 at 6:29 AM Si-Wei Liu <si-wei.liu at
oracle.com> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> On 11/16/2022 7:33 PM, Jason Wang wrote:
> >>>>> This patch allows device features to be provisioned
via vdpa. This
> >>>>> will be useful for preserving migration compatibility
between source
> >>>>> and destination:
> >>>>>
> >>>>> # vdpa dev add name dev1 mgmtdev pci/0000:02:00.0
device_features 0x300020000
> >>>> Miss the actual "vdpa dev config show" command
below
> >>> Right, let me fix that.
> >>>
> >>>>> # dev1: mac 52:54:00:12:34:56 link up link_announce
false mtu 65535
> >>>>> negotiated_features CTRL_VQ VERSION_1
ACCESS_PLATFORM
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Signed-off-by: Jason Wang <jasowang at
redhat.com>
> >>>>> ---
> >>>>> Changes since v1:
> >>>>> - Use uint64_t instead of __u64 for device_features
> >>>>> - Fix typos and tweak the manpage
> >>>>> - Add device_features to the help text
> >>>>> ---
> >>>>> man/man8/vdpa-dev.8 | 15
+++++++++++++++
> >>>>> vdpa/include/uapi/linux/vdpa.h | 1 +
> >>>>> vdpa/vdpa.c | 32
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---
> >>>>> 3 files changed, 45 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
> >>>>>
> >>>>> diff --git a/man/man8/vdpa-dev.8 b/man/man8/vdpa-dev.8
> >>>>> index 9faf3838..43e5bf48 100644
> >>>>> --- a/man/man8/vdpa-dev.8
> >>>>> +++ b/man/man8/vdpa-dev.8
> >>>>> @@ -31,6 +31,7 @@ vdpa-dev \- vdpa device
configuration
> >>>>> .I NAME
> >>>>> .B mgmtdev
> >>>>> .I MGMTDEV
> >>>>> +.RI "[ device_features " DEVICE_FEATURES
" ]"
> >>>>> .RI "[ mac " MACADDR " ]"
> >>>>> .RI "[ mtu " MTU " ]"
> >>>>> .RI "[ max_vqp " MAX_VQ_PAIRS "
]"
> >>>>> @@ -74,6 +75,15 @@ Name of the new vdpa device to add.
> >>>>> Name of the management device to use for device
addition.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> .PP
> >>>>> +.BI device_features " DEVICE_FEATURES"
> >>>>> +Specifies the virtio device features bit-mask that is
provisioned for the new vdpa device.
> >>>>> +
> >>>>> +The bits can be found under
include/uapi/linux/virtio*h.
> >>>>> +
> >>>>> +see macros such as VIRTIO_F_ and VIRTIO_XXX(e.g
NET)_F_ for specific bit values.
> >>>>> +
> >>>>> +This is optional.
> >>>> Document the behavior when this attribute is missing? For
e.g. inherit
> >>>> device features from parent device.
> >>> This is the current behaviour but unless we've found a way
to mandate
> >>> it, I'd like to not mention it. Maybe add a description to
say the
> >>> user needs to check the features after the add if features are
not
> >>> specified.
> >> Well, I think at least for live migration the mgmt software should
get
> >> to some consistent result between all vdpa parent drivers
regarding
> >> feature inheritance.
> > It would be hard. Especially for the device:
> >
> > 1) ask device_features from the device, in this case, new features
> > could be advertised after e.g a firmware update
> The consistency I meant is to always inherit all device features from
> the parent device for whatever it is capable of,
This looks fragile. How about the features that are mutually
exclusive? E.g FEATURE_X and FEATURE_Y that are both supported by the
mgmt?
> since that was the only
> reasonable behavior pre-dated the device_features attribute, even though
> there's no mandatory check by the vdpa core. This way it's
> self-descriptive and consistent for the mgmt software to infer, as users
> can check into dev_features at the parent mgmtdev level to know what
> features will be ended up with after 'vdpa dev add'. I thought even
> though inheritance is not mandated as part of uAPI, it should at least
> be mentioned as a recommended guide line (for drivers in particular),
> especially this is the only reasonable behavior with nowhere to check
> what features are ended up after add (i.e. for now we can only set but
> not possible to read the exact device_features at vdpa dev level, as yet).
I fully agree, but what I want to say is. Consider:
1) We've already had feature provisioning
2) It would be hard or even impossible to mandate the semantic
(consistency) of the features inheritance.
I'm fine with the doc, but the mgmt layer should not depend on this
and they should use feature provisioning instead.
> > 2) or have hierarchy architecture where several layers were placed
> > between vDPA and the real hardware
> Not sure what it means but I don't get why extra layers are needed. Do
> you mean extra layer to validate resulting features during add? Why vdpa
> core is not the right place to do that?
Just want to go wild because we can't expect how many layers are below vDPA.
vDPA core is the right place but the validating should be done during
feature provisioning since it's much more easier than trying to
mandating code defined behaviour like inheritance.
>
> >
> >> This inheritance predates the exposure of device
> >> features, until which user can check into specific features after
> >> creation. Imagine the case mgmt software of live migration needs
to work
> >> with older vdpa tool stack with no device_features exposure, how
does it
> >> know what device features are provisioned - it can only tell it
from
> >> dev_features shown at the parent mgmtdev level.
> > The behavior is totally defined by the code, it would be not safe for
> > the mgmt layer to depend on. Instead, the mgmt layer should use a
> > recent vdpa tool with feature provisioning interface to guarantee the
> > device_features if it wants since it has a clear semantic instead of
> > an implicit kernel behaviour which doesn't belong to an uAPI.
> That is going to be a slightly harsh requirement. If there's an
existing
> vDPA setup already provisioned before the device_features work, there is
> no way for it to live migrate even if the QEMU userspace stack is made
> live migrate-able. It'd be the best to find some mild alternative
before
> claiming certain setup unmigrate-able.
It can still work in a passive way, mgmt layer check the device
features and only allow the migration among the vDPA devices that have
the same device_feature. Less flexible than feature provisioning.
>
> >
> > If we can mandate the inheriting behaviour, users may be surprised at
> > the features in the production environment which are very hard to
> > debug.
> I'm not against an explicit uAPI to define and guard device_features
> inheritance, but on the other hand, wouldn't it be necessary to show
the
> actual device_features at vdpa dev level if it's not guaranteed to be
> the same with that of the parent mgmtdev?
I think this is already been done ,or anything I miss?
> That is even needed before
> users are allowed to provision specific device_features IMO...
>
> (that is the reason why I urged Michael to merge this patch soon before
> 6.1 GA:
>
https://lore.kernel.org/virtualization/1665422823-18364-1-git-send-email-si-wei.liu
at oracle.com/,
> for which I have a pending iproute patch to expose device_features at
> 'vdpa dev show' output).
Right.
>
> >
> >> IMHO it's not about whether vdpa core can or should mandate it
in a
> >> common place or not, it's that (the man page of) the CLI tool
should set
> >> user's expectation upfront for consumers (for e.g. mgmt
software). I.e.
> >> in case the parent driver doesn't follow the man page doc, it
should be
> >> considered as an implementation bug in the individual driver
rather than
> >> flexibility of its own.
> > So for the inheriting, it might be too late to do that:
> >
> > 1) no facility to mandate the inheriting and even if we had we
can't
> > fix old kernels
> We don't need to fix any old kernel as all drivers there had obeyed the
> inheriting rule since day 1. Or is there exception you did see? If so we
> should treat it as a bug to fix in driver.
I'm not sure it's a bug consider a vDPA device have only a subset
feature of what mgmt has.
>
> > 2) no uAPI so there no entity to carry on the semantic
> Not against of introducing an explicit uAPI, but what it may end up with
> is only some validation in a central place, right?
Well, this is what has been already done right now before the feature
provisioning, the kernel for anyway needs to validate the illegal
input from userspace.
> Why not do it now
> before adding device features provisioning to userspace. Such that it's
> functionality complete and correct no matter if device_features is
> specified or not.
So as discussed before, the kernel has already tried to do validation,
if there's any bug, we can fix that. If you meant userspace
validation, I'm not sure it is necessary:
1) kernel should do the validation
2) hard to keep forward compatibility, e.g features supported by the
mgmt device might not be even known by the userspace.
Thanks
>
> Thanks,
> -Siwei
>
> >
> > And this is one of the goals that feature provisioning tries to solve
> > so mgmt layer should use feature provisioning instead.
> >
> >>>> And what is the expected behavior when feature bit mask is
off but the
> >>>> corresponding config attr (for e.g. mac, mtu, and max_vqp)
is set?
> >>> It depends totally on the parent. And this "issue"
is not introduced
> >>> by this feature. Parents can decide to provision MQ by itself
even if
> >>> max_vqp is not specified.
> >> Sorry, maybe I wasn't clear enough. The case I referred to was
that the
> >> parent is capable of certain feature (for e.g. _F_MQ), the
associated
> >> config attr (for e.g. max_vqp) is already present in the CLI, but
the
> >> device_features bit mask doesn't have the corresponding bit
set (e.g.
> >> the _F_MQ bit). Are you saying that the failure of this apparently
> >> invalid/ambiguous/conflicting command can't be predicated and
the
> >> resulting behavior is totally ruled by the parent driver?
> > Ok, I get you. My understanding is that the kernel should do the
> > validation at least, it should not trust any configuration that is
> > sent from the userspace. This is how it works before the device
> > provisioning. I think we can add some validation in the kernel.
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> >> Thanks,
> >> -Siwei
> >>
> >>>> I think the previous behavior without device_features is
that any config
> >>>> attr implies the presence of the specific corresponding
feature (_F_MAC,
> >>>> _F_MTU, and _F_MQ). Should device_features override the
other config
> >>>> attribute, or such combination is considered invalid thus
should fail?
> >>> It follows the current policy, e.g if the parent doesn't
support
> >>> _F_MQ, we can neither provision _F_MQ nor max_vqp.
> >>>
> >>> Thanks
> >>>
> >>>> Thanks,
> >>>> -Siwei
> >>>>
> >>>>> +
> >>>>> .BI mac " MACADDR"
> >>>>> - specifies the mac address for the new vdpa
device.
> >>>>> This is applicable only for the network type of
vdpa device. This is optional.
> >>>>> @@ -127,6 +137,11 @@ vdpa dev add name foo mgmtdev
vdpa_sim_net
> >>>>> Add the vdpa device named foo on the management
device vdpa_sim_net.
> >>>>> .RE
> >>>>> .PP
> >>>>> +vdpa dev add name foo mgmtdev vdpa_sim_net
device_features 0x300020000
> >>>>> +.RS 4
> >>>>> +Add the vdpa device named foo on the management
device vdpa_sim_net with device_features of 0x300020000
> >>>>> +.RE
> >>>>> +.PP
> >>>>> vdpa dev add name foo mgmtdev vdpa_sim_net mac
00:11:22:33:44:55
> >>>>> .RS 4
> >>>>> Add the vdpa device named foo on the management
device vdpa_sim_net with mac address of 00:11:22:33:44:55.
> >>>>> diff --git a/vdpa/include/uapi/linux/vdpa.h
b/vdpa/include/uapi/linux/vdpa.h
> >>>>> index 94e4dad1..7c961991 100644
> >>>>> --- a/vdpa/include/uapi/linux/vdpa.h
> >>>>> +++ b/vdpa/include/uapi/linux/vdpa.h
> >>>>> @@ -51,6 +51,7 @@ enum vdpa_attr {
> >>>>> VDPA_ATTR_DEV_QUEUE_INDEX, /* u32
*/
> >>>>> VDPA_ATTR_DEV_VENDOR_ATTR_NAME, /*
string */
> >>>>> VDPA_ATTR_DEV_VENDOR_ATTR_VALUE, /* u64
*/
> >>>>> + VDPA_ATTR_DEV_FEATURES, /* u64
*/
> >>>>>
> >>>>> /* new attributes must be added above here */
> >>>>> VDPA_ATTR_MAX,
> >>>>> diff --git a/vdpa/vdpa.c b/vdpa/vdpa.c
> >>>>> index b73e40b4..d0ce5e22 100644
> >>>>> --- a/vdpa/vdpa.c
> >>>>> +++ b/vdpa/vdpa.c
> >>>>> @@ -27,6 +27,7 @@
> >>>>> #define VDPA_OPT_VDEV_MTU BIT(5)
> >>>>> #define VDPA_OPT_MAX_VQP BIT(6)
> >>>>> #define VDPA_OPT_QUEUE_INDEX BIT(7)
> >>>>> +#define VDPA_OPT_VDEV_FEATURES BIT(8)
> >>>>>
> >>>>> struct vdpa_opts {
> >>>>> uint64_t present; /* flags of present items */
> >>>>> @@ -38,6 +39,7 @@ struct vdpa_opts {
> >>>>> uint16_t mtu;
> >>>>> uint16_t max_vqp;
> >>>>> uint32_t queue_idx;
> >>>>> + uint64_t device_features;
> >>>>> };
> >>>>>
> >>>>> struct vdpa {
> >>>>> @@ -187,6 +189,17 @@ static int vdpa_argv_u32(struct
vdpa *vdpa, int argc, char **argv,
> >>>>> return get_u32(result, *argv, 10);
> >>>>> }
> >>>>>
> >>>>> +static int vdpa_argv_u64_hex(struct vdpa *vdpa, int
argc, char **argv,
> >>>>> + uint64_t *result)
> >>>>> +{
> >>>>> + if (argc <= 0 || !*argv) {
> >>>>> + fprintf(stderr, "number
expected\n");
> >>>>> + return -EINVAL;
> >>>>> + }
> >>>>> +
> >>>>> + return get_u64(result, *argv, 16);
> >>>>> +}
> >>>>> +
> >>>>> struct vdpa_args_metadata {
> >>>>> uint64_t o_flag;
> >>>>> const char *err_msg;
> >>>>> @@ -244,6 +257,10 @@ static void vdpa_opts_put(struct
nlmsghdr *nlh, struct vdpa *vdpa)
> >>>>> mnl_attr_put_u16(nlh,
VDPA_ATTR_DEV_NET_CFG_MAX_VQP, opts->max_vqp);
> >>>>> if (opts->present &
VDPA_OPT_QUEUE_INDEX)
> >>>>> mnl_attr_put_u32(nlh,
VDPA_ATTR_DEV_QUEUE_INDEX, opts->queue_idx);
> >>>>> + if (opts->present &
VDPA_OPT_VDEV_FEATURES) {
> >>>>> + mnl_attr_put_u64(nlh,
VDPA_ATTR_DEV_FEATURES,
> >>>>> +
opts->device_features);
> >>>>> + }
> >>>>> }
> >>>>>
> >>>>> static int vdpa_argv_parse(struct vdpa *vdpa, int
argc, char **argv,
> >>>>> @@ -329,6 +346,14 @@ static int vdpa_argv_parse(struct
vdpa *vdpa, int argc, char **argv,
> >>>>>
> >>>>> NEXT_ARG_FWD();
> >>>>> o_found |=
VDPA_OPT_QUEUE_INDEX;
> >>>>> + } else if (!strcmp(*argv,
"device_features") &&
> >>>>> + (o_optional &
VDPA_OPT_VDEV_FEATURES)) {
> >>>>> + NEXT_ARG_FWD();
> >>>>> + err = vdpa_argv_u64_hex(vdpa,
argc, argv,
> >>>>> +
&opts->device_features);
> >>>>> + if (err)
> >>>>> + return err;
> >>>>> + o_found |=
VDPA_OPT_VDEV_FEATURES;
> >>>>> } else {
> >>>>> fprintf(stderr, "Unknown
option \"%s\"\n", *argv);
> >>>>> return -EINVAL;
> >>>>> @@ -615,8 +640,9 @@ static int cmd_mgmtdev(struct vdpa
*vdpa, int argc, char **argv)
> >>>>> static void cmd_dev_help(void)
> >>>>> {
> >>>>> fprintf(stderr, "Usage: vdpa dev show [
DEV ]\n");
> >>>>> - fprintf(stderr, " vdpa dev add name
NAME mgmtdev MANAGEMENTDEV [ mac MACADDR ] [ mtu MTU ]\n");
> >>>>> - fprintf(stderr, "
[ max_vqp MAX_VQ_PAIRS ]\n");
> >>>>> + fprintf(stderr, " vdpa dev add name
NAME mgmtdevMANAGEMENTDEV [ device_features DEVICE_FEATURES]\n");
> >>>>> + fprintf(stderr, "
[ mac MACADDR ] [ mtu MTU ]\n");
> >>>>> + fprintf(stderr, "
[ max_vqp MAX_VQ_PAIRS ]\n");
> >>>>> fprintf(stderr, " vdpa dev del
DEV\n");
> >>>>> fprintf(stderr, "Usage: vdpa dev config
COMMAND [ OPTIONS ]\n");
> >>>>> fprintf(stderr, "Usage: vdpa dev vstats
COMMAND\n");
> >>>>> @@ -708,7 +734,7 @@ static int cmd_dev_add(struct vdpa
*vdpa, int argc, char **argv)
> >>>>> err = vdpa_argv_parse_put(nlh, vdpa, argc,
argv,
> >>>>>
VDPA_OPT_VDEV_MGMTDEV_HANDLE | VDPA_OPT_VDEV_NAME,
> >>>>> VDPA_OPT_VDEV_MAC |
VDPA_OPT_VDEV_MTU |
> >>>>> - VDPA_OPT_MAX_VQP);
> >>>>> + VDPA_OPT_MAX_VQP |
VDPA_OPT_VDEV_FEATURES);
> >>>>> if (err)
> >>>>> return err;
> >>>>>
>