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Re: [Qemu-devel] [RfC PATCH] Add udmabuf misc device


From: Oleksandr Andrushchenko
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] [RfC PATCH] Add udmabuf misc device
Date: Wed, 11 Apr 2018 08:59:32 +0300
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:52.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/52.7.0

On 04/10/2018 08:26 PM, Dongwon Kim wrote:
On Tue, Apr 10, 2018 at 09:37:53AM +0300, Oleksandr Andrushchenko wrote:
On 04/06/2018 09:57 PM, Dongwon Kim wrote:
On Fri, Apr 06, 2018 at 03:36:03PM +0300, Oleksandr Andrushchenko wrote:
On 04/06/2018 02:57 PM, Gerd Hoffmann wrote:
   Hi,

I fail to see any common ground for xen-zcopy and udmabuf ...
Does the above mean you can assume that xen-zcopy and udmabuf
can co-exist as two different solutions?
Well, udmabuf route isn't fully clear yet, but yes.

See also gvt (intel vgpu), where the hypervisor interface is abstracted
away into a separate kernel modules even though most of the actual vgpu
emulation code is common.
Thank you for your input, I'm just trying to figure out
which of the three z-copy solutions intersect and how much
And what about hyper-dmabuf?
xen z-copy solution is pretty similar fundamentally to hyper_dmabuf
in terms of these core sharing feature:

1. the sharing process - import prime/dmabuf from the producer -> extract
underlying pages and get those shared -> return references for shared pages
Another thing is danvet was kind of against to the idea of importing existing
dmabuf/prime buffer and forward it to the other domain due to synchronization
issues. He proposed to make hyper_dmabuf only work as an exporter so that it
can have a full control over the buffer. I think we need to talk about this
further as well.
Yes, I saw this. But this limits the use-cases so much.
For instance, running Android as a Guest (which uses ION to allocate
buffers) means that finally HW composer will import dma-buf into
the DRM driver. Then, in case of xen-front for example, it needs to be
shared with the backend (Host side). Of course, we can change user-space
to make xen-front allocate the buffers (make it exporter), but what we try
to avoid is to change user-space which in normal world would have remain
unchanged otherwise.
So, I do think we have to support this use-case and just have to understand
the complexity.


danvet, can you comment on this topic?

2. the page sharing mechanism - it uses Xen-grant-table.

And to give you a quick summary of differences as far as I understand
between two implementations (please correct me if I am wrong, Oleksandr.)

1. xen-zcopy is DRM specific - can import only DRM prime buffer
while hyper_dmabuf can export any dmabuf regardless of originator
Well, this is true. And at the same time this is just a matter
of extending the API: xen-zcopy is a helper driver designed for
xen-front/back use-case, so this is why it only has DRM PRIME API
2. xen-zcopy doesn't seem to have dma-buf synchronization between two VMs
while (as danvet called it as remote dmabuf api sharing) hyper_dmabuf sends
out synchronization message to the exporting VM for synchronization.
This is true. Again, this is because of the use-cases it covers.
But having synchronization for a generic solution seems to be a good idea.
Yeah, understood xen-zcopy works ok with your use case. But I am just curious
if it is ok not to have any inter-domain synchronization in this sharing model.
The synchronization is done with displif protocol [1]
The buffer being shared is technically dma-buf and originator needs to be able
to keep track of it.
As I am working in DRM terms the tracking is done by the DRM core
for me for free. (This might be one of the reasons Daniel sees DRM
based implementation fit very good from code-reuse POV).

3. 1-level references - when using grant-table for sharing pages, there will
be same # of refs (each 8 byte)
To be precise, grant ref is 4 bytes
You are right. Thanks for correction.;)

as # of shared pages, which is passed to
the userspace to be shared with importing VM in case of xen-zcopy.
The reason for that is that xen-zcopy is a helper driver, e.g.
the grant references come from the display backend [1], which implements
Xen display protocol [2]. So, effectively the backend extracts references
from frontend's requests and passes those to xen-zcopy as an array
of refs.
  Compared
to this, hyper_dmabuf does multiple level addressing to generate only one
reference id that represents all shared pages.
In the protocol [2] only one reference to the gref directory is passed
between VMs
(and the gref directory is a single-linked list of shared pages containing
all
of the grefs of the buffer).
ok, good to know. I will look into its implementation in more details but is
this gref directory (chained grefs) something that can be used for any general
memory sharing use case or is it jsut for xen-display (in current code base)?
Not to mislead you: one grant ref is passed via displif protocol,
but the page it's referencing contains the rest of the grant refs.

As to if this can be used for any memory: yes. It is the same for
sndif and displif Xen protocols, but defined twice as strictly speaking
sndif and displif are two separate protocols.

While reviewing your RFC v2 one of the comments I had [2] was that if we
can start from defining such a generic protocol for hyper-dmabuf.
It can be a header file, which not only has the description part
(which then become a part of Documentation/...rst file), but also defines
all the required constants for requests, responses, defines message formats,
state diagrams etc. all at one place. Of course this protocol must not be
Xen specific, but be OS/hypervisor agnostic.
Having that will trigger a new round of discussion, so we have it all designed
and discussed before we start implementing.

Besides the protocol we have to design UAPI part as well and make sure
the hyper-dmabuf is not only accessible from user-space, but there will be number
of kernel-space users as well.

4. inter VM messaging (hype_dmabuf only) - hyper_dmabuf has inter-vm msg
communication defined for dmabuf synchronization and private data (meta
info that Matt Roper mentioned) exchange.
This is true, xen-zcopy has no means for inter VM sync and meta-data,
simply because it doesn't have any code for inter VM exchange in it,
e.g. the inter VM protocol is handled by the backend [1].
5. driver-to-driver notification (hyper_dmabuf only) - importing VM gets
notified when newdmabuf is exported from other VM - uevent can be optionally
generated when this happens.

6. structure - hyper_dmabuf is targetting to provide a generic solution for
inter-domain dmabuf sharing for most hypervisors, which is why it has two
layers as mattrope mentioned, front-end that contains standard API and backend
that is specific to hypervisor.
Again, xen-zcopy is decoupled from inter VM communication
No idea, didn't look at it in detail.

Looks pretty complex from a distant view.  Maybe because it tries to
build a communication framework using dma-bufs instead of a simple
dma-buf passing mechanism.
we started with simple dma-buf sharing but realized there are many
things we need to consider in real use-case, so we added communication
, notification and dma-buf synchronization then re-structured it to
front-end and back-end (this made things more compicated..) since Xen
was not our only target. Also, we thought passing the reference for the
buffer (hyper_dmabuf_id) is not secure so added uvent mechanism later.

Yes, I am looking at it now, trying to figure out the full story
and its implementation. BTW, Intel guys were about to share some
test application for hyper-dmabuf, maybe I have missed one.
It could probably better explain the use-cases and the complexity
they have in hyper-dmabuf.
One example is actually in github. If you want take a look at it, please
visit:

https://github.com/downor/linux_hyper_dmabuf_test/tree/xen/simple_export
Thank you, I'll have a look
Like xen-zcopy it seems to depend on the idea that the hypervisor
manages all memory it is easy for guests to share pages with the help of
the hypervisor.
So, for xen-zcopy we were not trying to make it generic,
it just solves display (dumb) zero-copying use-cases for Xen.
We implemented it as a DRM helper driver because we can't see any
other use-cases as of now.
For example, we also have Xen para-virtualized sound driver, but
its buffer memory usage is not comparable to what display wants
and it works somewhat differently (e.g. there is no "frame done"
event, so one can't tell when the sound buffer can be "flipped").
At the same time, we do not use virtio-gpu, so this could probably
be one more candidate for shared dma-bufs some day.
   Which simply isn't the case on kvm.

hyper-dmabuf and xen-zcopy could maybe share code, or hyper-dmabuf build
on top of xen-zcopy.
Hm, I can imagine that: xen-zcopy could be a library code for hyper-dmabuf
in terms of implementing all that page sharing fun in multiple directions,
e.g. Host->Guest, Guest->Host, Guest<->Guest.
But I'll let Matt and Dongwon to comment on that.
I think we can definitely collaborate. Especially, maybe we are using some
outdated sharing mechanism/grant-table mechanism in our Xen backend (thanks
for bringing that up Oleksandr). However, the question is once we collaborate
somehow, can xen-zcopy's usecase use the standard API that hyper_dmabuf
provides? I don't think we need different IOCTLs that do the same in the final
solution.

If you think of xen-zcopy as a library (which implements Xen
grant references mangling) and DRM PRIME wrapper on top of that
library, we can probably define proper API for that library,
so both xen-zcopy and hyper-dmabuf can use it. What is more, I am
about to start upstreaming Xen para-virtualized sound device driver soon,
which also uses similar code and gref passing mechanism [3].
(Actually, I was about to upstream drm/xen-front, drm/xen-zcopy and
snd/xen-front and then propose a Xen helper library for sharing big buffers,
so common code of the above drivers can use the same code w/o code
duplication)
I think it is possible to use your functions for memory sharing part in
hyper_dmabuf's backend (this 'backend' means the layer that does page sharing
and inter-vm communication with xen-specific way.), so why don't we work on
"Xen helper library for sharing big buffers" first while we continue our
discussion on the common API layer that can cover any dmabuf sharing cases.

Well, I would love we reuse the code that I have, but I also
understand that it was limited by my use-cases. So, I do not
insist we have to ;)
If we start designing and discussing hyper-dmabuf protocol we of course
can work on this helper library in parallel.
Thank you,
Oleksandr

P.S. All, is it a good idea to move this out of udmabuf thread into a
dedicated one?
Either way is fine with me.
So, if you can start designing the protocol we may have a dedicated mail
thread for that. I will try to help with the protocol as much as I can

cheers,
   Gerd

Thank you,
Oleksandr

P.S. Sorry for making your original mail thread to discuss things much
broader than your RFC...

[1] https://github.com/xen-troops/displ_be
[2] 
https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v4.16-rc7/source/include/xen/interface/io/displif.h#L484
[3] 
https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v4.16-rc7/source/include/xen/interface/io/sndif.h

[1] https://elixir.bootlin.com/linux/v4.16-rc7/source/include/xen/interface/io/displif.h [2] https://lists.xenproject.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2018-04/msg00685.html



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