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Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH] virtio-net: do not start queues that are not en


From: Jason Wang
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] [PATCH] virtio-net: do not start queues that are not enabled by the guest
Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2019 15:47:48 +0800
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.4.0


On 2019/2/22 下午12:22, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 10:10:08PM -0500, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
On Fri, Feb 22, 2019 at 11:04:05AM +0800, Jason Wang wrote:
On 2019/2/22 上午9:35, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote:
On Thu, Feb 21, 2019 at 05:40:22PM +0800, Jason Wang wrote:
On 2019/2/21 下午4:18, Yuri Benditovich wrote:

          For 1.0 device, we can fix the queue_enable, but for 0.9x device how 
do
          you enable one specific queue in this case? (setting status?)


      Do I understand correctly that for 0.9 device in some cases the device 
will
      receive feature _MQ set, but will not receive 
VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_MQ_VQ_PAIRS_SET?
      Or the problem is different?


Let me clarify, VIRTIO_NET_CTRL_MQ_VQ_PAIRS_SET is used to control the the
number of queue pairs used by device for doing transmission and reception. It
was not used to enable or disable a virtqueue.

For 1.0 device, we should use queue_enable in pci cfg to enable and disable
queue:


We could do:

1) allocate memory and set queue_enable for vq0

2) allocate memory and set queue_enable for vq1

3) Set vq paris to 1

4) allocate memory and set queue_enable for vq2

5) allocate memory and set queue_enable for vq3

6) set vq pairs to 2
I do not think spec allows this.


The driver MUST follow this sequence to initialize a device:
1. Reset the device.
2. Set the ACKNOWLEDGE status bit: the guest OS has noticed the device.
3. Set the DRIVER status bit: the guest OS knows how to drive the device.
4. Read device feature bits, and write the subset of feature bits understood by 
the OS and driver to the
device. During this step the driver MAY read (but MUST NOT write) the 
device-specific configuration
fields to check that it can support the device before accepting it.
5. Set the FEATURES_OK status bit. The driver MUST NOT accept new feature bits 
after this step.
6. Re-read device status to ensure the FEATURES_OK bit is still set: otherwise, 
the device does not
support our subset of features and the device is unusable.
7. Perform device-specific setup, including discovery of virtqueues for the 
device, optional per-bus setup,
reading and possibly writing the device’s virtio configuration space, and 
population of virtqueues.
8. Set the DRIVER_OK status bit. At this point the device is “live”.


Thus vqs are setup at step 7.

# of vq pairs are set up through a command which is a special
buffer, and spec says:

The driver MUST NOT send any buffer available notifications to the device 
before setting DRIVER_OK.

So you meant write to queue_enable is forbidden after DRIVER_OK (though it's
not very clear to me from the  spec). And if a driver want to enable new
queues, it must reset the device?

That's my reading.  What do you think?


Looks like I can infer this from the spec, maybe it's better to clarify.


Btw some legacy drivers might violate this by addig buffers
before driver_ok.


Yes, but it's probably too late to fix them.

Thanks.



But this requires a proper implementation for queue_enable for vhost which is
missed in qemu and probably what you really want to do.

but for 0.9x device, there's no such way to do this. That's the issue.
0.9x there's no queue enable, assumption is PA!=0 means VQ has
been enabled.


So
driver must allocate all queBes before starting the device, otherwise there's
no way to enable it afterwards.
As per spec queues must be allocated before DRIVER_OK.

That is universal.

If I understand correctly, this is not what is done by current windows
drivers.

Thanks


There're tricks to make it work like what is
done in your patch, but it depends on a specific implementation like qemu which
is sub-optimal.




          A fundamental question is what prevents you from just initialization 
all
          queues during driver start? It looks to me this save lots of efforts
          than allocating queue dynamically.


      This is not so trivial in Windows driver, as it does not have objects for 
queues
      that it does not use. Linux driver first of all allocates all the
      queues and then
      adds Rx/Tx to those it will use. Windows driver first decides how many 
queues
      it will use then allocates objects for them and initializes them from 
zero to
      fully functional state.


Well, you just need to allocate some memory for the virtqueue, there's no need
to make it visible to the rest until it was enabled.

Thanks







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