On 10/28/16 13:28, Henning Schild wrote:
Hey,
i am running an unusual setup where i assign pci devices behind the
back of libvirt. I have two options to do that:
1. a wrapper script for qemu that takes care of suid-root and appends
arguments for pci-assign
2. virsh qemu-monitor-command ... 'device_add pci-assign...'
I know i should probably not be doing this, it is a workaround to
introduce fine-grained pci-assignment in an openstack setup, where
vendor and device id are not enough to pick the right device for a vm.
(1) The libvirt domain XML identifies the host PCI device to assign by
full PCI address (see the <source> element:
<
http://libvirt.org/formatdomain.html#elementsHostDev>); it does not
filter with vendor/device ID.
So, I believe your comment refers to the pci-stub host kernel driver not
being flexible enough for binding vs. not binding different instances of
the same vendor/device ID.
If that's the case, would you be helped by the following host kernel patch?
[PATCH] PCI: pci-stub: accept exceptions to the ID- and class-based matching
<
http://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-pci/msg55497.html>
(2) Is there any reason (other than (1)) that you are using the legacy /
deprecated pci-assign method, rather than VFIO?
I suggest to evaluate whether the "pci-stub.except=..." kernel parameter
helped your use case, and if (consequently) you could move to a fully
libvirt + VFIO based config.
Thanks
Laszlo
In both cases qemu will crash with the following output:
> qemu: hardware error: pci read failed, ret = 0 errno = 22
followed by the usual machine state dump. With strace i found it to be
a failing read on the config space file of my device.
/sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:xx:xx.x/config
A few reads out of that file succeeded, as well as accesses on vendor
etc.
Manually launching a qemu with the pci-assign works without a problem,
so i "blame" libvirt and the cgroup environment the qemu ends up in.
So i put a bash into the exact same cgroup setup - next to a running
qemu, expecting a dd or hexdump on the config-space file to fail. But
from that bash i can read the file without a problem.
Has anyone seen that problem before? Right now i do not know what i
am missing, maybe qemu is hitting some limits configured for the
cgroups or whatever. I can not use pci-assign from libvirt, but if i
did would it configure cgroups in a different way or relax some limits?
What would be a good next step to debug that? Right now i am looking at
kernel event traces, but the machine is pretty big and so is the trace.
That assignment used to work and i do not know how it broke, i have
tried combinations of several kernels, versions of libvirt and qemu.
(kernel 3.18 and 4.4, libvirt 1.3.2 and 2.0.0, and qemu 2.2.1 and 2.7)
All combinations show the same problem, even the ones that work on
other machines. So when it comes to software versions the problem could
well be caused by a software update of another component, that i
got with the package manager and did not compile myself. It is a debian
8.6 with all recent updates installed. My guess would be that systemd
could have an influence on cgroups or limits causing such a problem.
regards,
Henning