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Re: [Qemu-devel] device assignment for embedded Power


From: Benjamin Herrenschmidt
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] device assignment for embedded Power
Date: Sat, 02 Jul 2011 09:05:46 +1000

On Fri, 2011-07-01 at 21:59 +0100, Paul Brook wrote:
> > On Fri, 1 Jul 2011 18:03:01 +0100
> > 
> > Paul Brook <address@hidden> wrote:
> > > Basically you should start by implementing full emulation of a device
> > > with similar characteristics to the one you want to passthrough.
> > 
> > That's not going to happen.
> 
> Why is your device so unique? How does it interact with the guest system and 
> what features does it require that doen't exist in any device that can be 
> emulated?

Do you guys only support PCI pass-through by doing full emulation of the
all possible supported PCI devices first ? :-)

> I'm also extremely sceptical of anything that only works in a kvm 
> environment.  
> Makes me think it's an unmaintainable hack, and almost certainly going to 
> cause you immense amounts of pain later.

See above question...

Cheers,
Ben.
 
> > > I doubt you're going to get generic passthrough of arbitrary devices
> > > working in a useful way.
> > 
> > It's usefully working for us internally -- we're just trying to find a way
> > to improve it for upstream, with a better configuration mechanism.
> 
> I don't believe that either.  More likely you've got passthrough of device 
> hanging off your specific CPU bus, using only (or even a subset of) the 
> facilities provided by that bus.
> 
> > > Basically you have to emulate  everything that is different between the
> > > host and guest.
> > 
> > Directly assigning a device means you don't get to have differences between
> > the actual hardware device and what the guest sees.  The kind of thin
> > wrapper you're suggesting might have some use cases, but it's a different
> > problem from what we're trying to solve.
> 
> That's the problem. You've skipped several steps and gone startigh for 
> optimization before you've even got basic functionality working.
> 
> You've also missed the point I was making.  In order to do device passthrough 
> you need to define a boundary allong which the emulated machine state can be 
> fully replicated on the host machine.  Anything inside this boundary is (by 
> definition) that same on both the host and guest systems (we're effectively 
> using host hardware to emulate a device for us). Outside that boundary the 
> host and guest systems will diverge.
> 
> For a device that merely responds to CPU initiated MMIO transfers this is 
> pretty simple, it's the point at which MMIO transfers are generated. So the 
> guest gets a proxy device that intercepts accesses to that memory region, and 
> the host proxies some way for qemu to poke values at the host device.
> 
> > > Once you've done all the above, host device passthrough should be
> > > relatively straightforward.  Just replace the emulation bits in the
> > > above device with code that pokes at a real device via the relevant
> > > kernel API.
> > 
> > That's not what we mean by direct device assignment.
> 
> Maybe, but IMO but it's a necessary prerequisite. You're trying to run before 
> you can walk.
> 
> > We're talking about directly mapping the registers into the guest.  The
> > whole point is performance.
> 
> That's an additional step after you get passthrough working the normal way.
> We already have mechanisms (or at least patches) for mapping file-like 
> objects 
> into guest physical memory.  That's largely independent of device 
> passthrough.  
> It's a relatively minor tweak to how the passthrough device sets up its MMIO 
> regions.
> 
> Mapping host device MMIO regions into guest space is entirely uninteresting 
> unless we already have some way of creating guest-host passthrough devices.  
> Creating guest-device passthrough devices isn't going to happen until the can 
> create arbitrary devices (within the set emulated by qemu) that interact with 
> the rest of the emulated machine in a similar way.
> 
> Paul





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