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Re: [Qemu-arm] [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 00/13] target/arm/kvm: enable SVE in


From: Andrea Bolognani
Subject: Re: [Qemu-arm] [Qemu-devel] [PATCH 00/13] target/arm/kvm: enable SVE in guests
Date: Tue, 14 May 2019 14:29:51 +0200
User-agent: Evolution 3.32.2 (3.32.2-1.fc30)

On Mon, 2019-05-13 at 14:36 +0200, Andrew Jones wrote:
> On Mon, May 13, 2019 at 11:32:46AM +0200, Andrea Bolognani wrote:
> > On Sun, 2019-05-12 at 10:36 +0200, Andrew Jones wrote:
> > [...]
> > >    CPU type | accel | sve-max-vq | sve-vls-map
> > >    -------------------------------------------
> > >  1)     max | tcg   |  $MAX_VQ   |  $VLS_MAP
> > >  2)     max | kvm   |  $MAX_VQ   |  $VLS_MAP
> > >  3)    host | kvm   |  N/A       |  $VLS_MAP
> > > 
> > > Where for (1) $MAX_VQ sets the maximum vq and smaller vqs are
> > > all supported when $VLS_MAP is zero, or when the vqs are selected
> > > in $VLS_MAP.
> > 
> > I'm a bit confused by the nomenclature here. VL clearly stands for
> > Vector Length, but what does VQ stand for? You seem to be using the
> > two terms pretty much interchangeably throughout the cover letter.
> 
> As Dave pointed out, they're both lengths, but VQ specifically points
> out that the unit is 'Q'uadwords. We could use VQS instead of VLS,
> "Vector Lengths" sounds better.

Alright, it makes sense - once you've managed to figure out what
exactly a "quadword" is, at least :)

Since we expect management applications to use QMP to discover what
vector lengths are supported and then provide an explicit map, I
think it's fair to say that the ability to specify a single maximum
vector length is going to be exclusively used as a convenience for
command line users.

In that light, I think it would be reasonable for the usage to look
along the lines of

  -cpu host,sve-vl-map=0xd # machine-friendly variant
  -cpu max,sve-vl-max=512  # user-friendly variant

with documentation clearly pointing out that the two options expect
completely different formats - but that was the case even before,
so we would have had to document that anyway.

> > > The QMP query returns a list of valid vq lists. For example, if
> > > a guest can use vqs 1, 2, 3, and 4, then the following list will
> > > be returned
> > > 
> > >  [ [ 1 ], [ 1, 2 ], [ 1, 2, 3 ], [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ] ]
> > > 
> > > Another example might be 1, 2, 4, as the architecture states 3
> > > is optional. In that case the list would be
> > > 
> > >  [ [ 1 ], [ 1, 2 ], [ 1, 2, 4 ] ]
> > 
> > I think the proposed QMP command is problematic, because it reports
> > the valid vector lengths for either KVM or TCG based on which
> > accelerator is currently enabled: it should report all information
> > at all times instead, similarly to how query-gic-capabilities does
> > it.
> 
> OK, and then with a flag stating which is when then.

Correct.

> Dave points out
> we may want to reduce the list to a single set and then add flags
> to indicate what can be done with it in order to derive other sets.
> What do you think about that?

So right now all that can be done is truncating the list by removing
an arbitrary number of elements from the end, right? Eg. if you have
[ 1, 2, 4 ] you can use either that or [ 1, 2 ] or [ 1 ]. But in the
future you might also be able to mask single elements in the middle
of the list, thus enabling things like [ 1, 4 ].

That doesn't sound very complicated to support in libvirt, though I
have to say that I'm not a big fan of this proposal because as far as
I can see it basically means implementing the very same logic twice,
once in QEMU and then once more in libvirt.

> > [...]
> > > And now for what might be a bit more controversial; how we input
> > > the valid vector set with sve-vls-map. Well, sve-vls-map is a
> > > 64-bit bitmap, which is admittedly not user friendly and also not
> > > the same size as KVM's vls bitmap (which is 8 64-bit words). Here's
> > > the justification:
> > > 
> > >  1) We want to use the QEMU command line in order for the information
> > >     to be migrated without needing to add more VM state.
> > >  2) It's not easy/pretty to input arrays on the QEMU command line.
> > >  3) We already need to use the QMP query to get a valid set, which
> > >     isn't user friendly either, meaning we're already in libvirt
> > >     territory.
> > >  4) A 64-bit map (supporting up to 8192-bit vectors) is likely big
> > >     enough for quite some time (currently KVM and TCG only support
> > >     2048-bit vectors).
> > >  5) If user friendliness is needed more than migratability then
> > >     the 'max' cpu type can be used with the sve-max-vq property.
> > >  6) It's possible to probe the full valid vector set from the
> > >     command line by using something like sve-vls-map=0xffff and
> > >     then, when it fails, the error message will state the correct
> > >     map, e.g. 0xb.
> > 
> > I don't have a problem with having to use a bitmap internally,
> > though libvirt will clearly want to expose a more approachable
> > interface to users.
> > 
> > However, QMP reporting the information in the current format means
> > we'd have to build an additional parser on top of the bitmap handling
> > and conversion routines we'll clearly need to make this work; plus it
> > just feels weird that the information reported by QMP can't be used
> > on the command line without going through some tranformation first.
> > 
> > Wouldn't it make more sense to both accept and report bitmaps?
> 
> If we eventually need more than one word for the bitmap then it'll
> require parsing and bitmap composition code in libvirt anyway. I
> was thinking by pointing out each bit separately that we could
> boundlessly grow the list without having to change anything in
> libvirt later.

If the size of the bitmap on the KVM side is 512 bits, why don't we
just make it that size on the QEMU side too from the start?

-- 
Andrea Bolognani / Red Hat / Virtualization




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