On Thu, Aug 04, 2022 at 12:18:26PM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote:
On Thu, 4 Aug 2022 13:51:20 -0300
Jason Gunthorpe <jgg(a)nvidia.com> wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 01, 2022 at 09:49:28AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote:
>
> > > > > > Fortunately these new vendor/device-specific drivers can be
easily
> > > > > > identified as being "vfio-pci + extra stuff" -
all that's needed is to
> > > > > > look at the output of the "modinfo $driver_name"
command to see if
> > > > > > "vfio_pci" is in the alias list for the driver.
>
> We are moving in a direction on the kernel side to expose a sysfs
> under the PCI device that definitively says it is VFIO enabled, eg
> something like
>
> /sys/devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.6/vfio/<N>
>
> Which is how every other subsystem in the kernel works. When this
> lands libvirt can simply stat the vfio directory and confirm that the
> device handle it is looking at is vfio enabled, for all things that
> vfio support.
>
> My thinking had been to do the above work a bit later, but if libvirt
> needs it right now then lets do it right away so we don't have to
> worry about this hacky modprobe stuff down the road?
That seems like a pretty long gap, there are vfio-pci variant drivers
since v5.18 and this hasn't even been proposed for v6.0 (aka v5.20)
midway through the merge window. We therefore have at least 3 kernels
exposing devices in a way that libvirt can't make use of simply due to
a driver matching test.
That is reasonable, but I'd say those three kernels only have two
drivers and they both have vfio as a substring in their name - so the
simple thing of just substring searching 'vfio' would get us over that
gap.
might be leveraged for managed='yes' with variant drivers.
Once vfio
devices expose a chardev themselves, libvirt might order the tests as:
I wasn't thinking to include the chardev part if we are to expedite
this. The struct device bit alone is enough and it doesn't have the
complex bits needed to make the cdev.
If you say you want to do it we'll do it for v6.1..
Jason