On Mon, Jul 29, 2024 at 06:26:41PM +0100, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 29, 2024 at 01:00:30PM -0400, Peter Xu wrote:
> > On Mon, Jul 29, 2024 at 04:58:03PM +0100, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> > >
> > > We've got two mutually conflicting goals with the machine type
> > > definitions.
> > >
> > > Primarily we use them to ensure stable ABI, but an important
> > > secondary goal is to enable new tunables to have new defaults
> > > set, without having to update every mgmt app. The latter
> > > works very well when the defaults have no dependancy on the
> > > platform kernel/OS, but breaks migration when they do have a
> > > platform dependancy.
> > >
> > > > - Firstly, never quietly flipping any bit that affects the ABI...
> > > >
> > > > - Have a default value of off, then QEMU will always allow the VM
to boot
> > > > by default, while advanced users can opt-in on new features. We
can't
> > > > make this ON by default otherwise some VMs can already fail to
boot,
> > > >
> > > > - If the host doesn't support the feature while the cmdline
enabled it,
> > > > it needs to fail QEMU boot rather than flipping, so that it says
"hey,
> > > > this host does not support running such VM specified, due to XXX
> > > > feature missing".
> > > >
> > > > That's the only way an user could understand what happened, and
IMHO that's
> > > > a clean way that we stick with QEMU cmdline on defining the guest
ABI,
> > > > while in which the machine type is the fundation of such definition,
as the
> > > > machine type can decides many of the rest compat properties. And
that's
> > > > the whole point of the compat properties too (to make sure the guest
ABI is
> > > > stable).
> > > >
> > > > If kernel breaks it easily, all compat property things that we
maintain can
> > > > already stop making sense in general, because it didn't define
the whole
> > > > guest ABI..
> > > >
> > > > So AFAIU that's really what we used for years, I hope I
didn't overlook
> > > > somehting. And maybe we don't yet need the "-platform"
layer if we can
> > > > keep up with this rule?
> > >
> > > We've failed at this for years wrt enabling use of new defaults that
have
> > > a platform depedancy, so historical practice isn't a good reference.
> > >
> > > There are 100's (possibly 1000's) of tunables set implicitly as
part of
> > > the machine type, and of those, libvirt likely only exposes a few
10's
> > > of tunables. The vast majority are low level details that no mgmt app
> > > wants to know about, they just want to accept QEMU's new defaults,
> > > while preserving machine ABI. This is a good thing. No one wants the
> > > burden of wiring up every single tunable into libvirt and mgmt apps.
> > >
> > > This is what the "-platform" concept would be intended to
preserve. It
> > > would allow a way to enable groups of settings that have a platform level
> > > dependancy, without ever having to teach either libvirt or the mgmt apps
> > > about the individual tunables.
> >
> > Do you think we can achieve similar goal by simply turning the feature to
> > ON only after a few QEMU releases? I also mentioned that idea below.
> >
> >
https://lore.kernel.org/r/ZqQNKZ9_OPhDq2AK@x1n
> >
> > So far it really sounds like the right thing to do to me to fix all similar
> > issues, even without introducing anything new we need to maintain.
>
> Turning a feature with a platform dependency to "on" implies that
> the machine type will cease to work out of the box for platforms
> which lack the feature. IMHO that's not acceptable behaviour for
> any of our supported platforms.
Right, that's why I was thinking whether we should just always be on the
safe side, even if I just replied in the other email to Akihiko, that we do
have the option to make this more aggresive by turning those to ON after
even 1-2 years or even less.. and we have control of how aggressive this
can be.
>
> IOW, "after a few QEMU releases" implies a delay of as much as
> 5 years, while we wait for platforms which don't support the
> feature to drop out of our supported targets list. I don't
> think that'll satisfy the desire to get the new feature
> available to users as soon as practical for their particular
> platform.
The feature is always available since the 1st day, right? We just need the
user to opt-in, by specifying ON in the cmdline.
That'll be my take on this that QEMU's default VM setup should be always
bootable, migratable, and so on. Then user opt-in on stuff like this one,
where there's implication on the ABIs. The "user" can also include
Libvirt. I mean when something is really important, Libvirt should, IMHO,
opt-in by treating that similarly like many cpu properties, and by probing
the host first.
IIUC there aren't a lot of things like that (part of guest ABI & host
kernel / HW dependent), am I right? Otherwise I would expect more failures
like this one, but it isn't as much as that yet. IIUC it means the efforts
to make Libvirt get involved should be hopefully under control too. The
worst case is Libvirt doesn't auto-on it, but again the user should always
have the option to turn it on when it's necessary.
If it is left to libvirt, then it would very likely end up being a user
opt-in, not auto-enabled.
With regards,
Daniel
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