On 08/24/2017 02:52 AM, Nitesh Konkar wrote:
Hello John,
In case of PPC, IOMMU in the host kernel either has it or not compiled in.
The /sys/kernel/iommu_groups check is good enough to verify if it was
compiled with the kernel or not.
If not, then we can have a ppc specific message there:
virHostMsgCheck(hvname, "%s", _("if IOMMU is enabled by
kernel"));
if (sb.st_nlink <= 2) {
if(!isPPC) {
virHostMsgFail(level,
"IOMMU appears to be disabled in kernel. "
"Add %s to kernel cmdline arguments", bootarg);
} else {
virHostMsgFail(level,
"IOMMU capability not compiled into kernel. ");
}
return -1;
}
virHostMsgPass();
return 0;
Should I say don't top post please...
Anyway, I've updated the commit message, added the extra check/error
message and pushed the patch upstream
Tks,
John
On Wed, Aug 23, 2017 at 7:06 PM, John Ferlan <jferlan(a)redhat.com
<mailto:jferlan@redhat.com>> wrote:
On 08/17/2017 09:48 AM, Nitesh Konkar wrote:
> Fix the warning generated on PPC by virt-host-validate
> for IOMMU
>
> Signed-off-by: Nitesh Konkar <nitkon12(a)linux.vnet.ibm.com
<mailto:nitkon12@linux.vnet.ibm.com>>
> ---
> tools/virt-host-validate-common.c | 10 +++++++---
> 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
>
> diff --git a/tools/virt-host-validate-common.c
b/tools/virt-host-validate-common.c
> index 6faed04..51fa8c0 100644
> --- a/tools/virt-host-validate-common.c
> +++ b/tools/virt-host-validate-common.c
> @@ -35,6 +35,7 @@
> #include "virfile.h"
> #include "virt-host-validate-common.h"
> #include "virstring.h"
> +#include "virarch.h"
>
> #define VIR_FROM_THIS VIR_FROM_NONE
>
> @@ -442,8 +443,7 @@ int virHostValidateIOMMU(const char *hvname,
> virBitmapPtr flags;
> struct stat sb;
> const char *bootarg = NULL;
> - bool isAMD = false, isIntel = false;
> -
> + bool isAMD = false, isIntel = false, isPPC = false;
> flags = virHostValidateGetCPUFlags();
>
> if (flags && virBitmapIsBitSet(flags,
VIR_HOST_VALIDATE_CPU_FLAG_VMX))
> @@ -453,9 +453,10 @@ int virHostValidateIOMMU(const char *hvname,
>
> virBitmapFree(flags);
>
> - virHostMsgCheck(hvname, "%s", _("for device assignment
IOMMU
support"));
> + isPPC = ARCH_IS_PPC64(virArchFromHost());
>
> if (isIntel) {
> + virHostMsgCheck(hvname, "%s", _("for device assignment
IOMMU support"));
> if (access("/sys/firmware/acpi/tables/DMAR", F_OK) == 0) {
> virHostMsgPass();
> bootarg = "intel_iommu=on";
> @@ -467,6 +468,7 @@ int virHostValidateIOMMU(const char *hvname,
> return -1;
> }
> } else if (isAMD) {
> + virHostMsgCheck(hvname, "%s", _("for device assignment
IOMMU support"));
> if (access("/sys/firmware/acpi/tables/IVRS", F_OK) == 0) {
> virHostMsgPass();
> bootarg = "iommu=pt iommu=1";
> @@ -477,6 +479,8 @@ int virHostValidateIOMMU(const char *hvname,
> "hardware platform");
> return -1;
> }
> + } else if (isPPC) {
> + /* Empty Block */
So there's nothing to check at all? Perhaps elaborate in the commit
message...
Still what happens when @bootarg isn't populated and by chance we fall
into the:
if (sb.st_nlink <= 2) {
}
condition below here? You'll get "Add <nil>..."
Or can we not get to that code? I'm not PPC and IOMMU aware, so I'm
asking...
Tks,
John
> } else {
> virHostMsgFail(level,
> "Unknown if this platform has IOMMU
support");
>