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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] [RFC Design Doc v2] Add vNVDIMM support for Xen
On 08/03/16 02:45, Jan Beulich wrote:
> >>> On 03.08.16 at 08:54, <haozhong.zhang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > On 08/02/16 08:46, Jan Beulich wrote:
> >> >>> On 18.07.16 at 02:29, <haozhong.zhang@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> >> > (4) Because the reserved area is now used by Xen hypervisor, it
> >> > should not be accessible by Dom0 any more. Therefore, if a host
> >> > pmem device is recorded by Xen hypervisor, Xen will unmap its
> >> > reserved area from Dom0. Our design also needs to extend Linux
> >> > NVDIMM driver to "balloon out" the reserved area after it
> >> > successfully reports a pmem device to Xen hypervisor.
> >>
> >> ... "balloon out" ... _after_? That'd be unsafe.
> >>
> >
> > Before ballooning is accomplished, the pmem driver does not create any
> > device node under /dev/ and hence no one except the pmem drive can
> > access the reserved area on pmem, so I think it's okey to balloon
> > after reporting.
>
> Right now Dom0 isn't allowed to access any memory in use by Xen
> (and not explicitly shared), and I don't think we should deviate
> from that model for pmem.
>
In this design, Xen hypervisor unmaps the reserved area from Dom0 so
that Dom0 cannot access the reserved area afterwards. And "balloon" is
in fact not a memory ballooning, because Linux kernel never allocates
from pmem like normal ram. In my current implementation, it's just to
remove the reserved area from a resource struct covering pmem.
> >> > 4.2.3 Get Host Machine Address (SPA) of Host pmem Files
> >> >
> >> > Before a pmem file is assigned to a domain, we need to know the host
> >> > SPA ranges that are allocated to this file. We do this work in xl.
> >> >
> >> > If a pmem device /dev/pmem0 is given, xl will read
> >> > /sys/block/pmem0/device/{resource,size} respectively for the start
> >> > SPA and size of the pmem device.
> >> >
> >> > If a pre-allocated file /mnt/dax/file is given,
> >> > (1) xl first finds the host pmem device where /mnt/dax/file is. Then
> >> > it uses the method above to get the start SPA of the host pmem
> >> > device.
> >> > (2) xl then uses fiemap ioctl to get the extend mappings of
> >> > /mnt/dax/file, and adds the corresponding physical offsets and
> >> > lengths in each mapping entries to above start SPA to get the SPA
> >> > ranges pre-allocated for this file.
> >>
> >> Remind me again: These extents never change, not even across
> >> reboot? I think this would be good to be written down here explicitly.
> >
> > Yes
> >
> >> Hadn't there been talk of using labels to be able to allow a guest to
> >> own the exact same physical range again after reboot or guest or
> >> host?
> >
> > You mean labels in NVDIMM label storage area? As defined in Intel
> > NVDIMM Namespace Specification, labels are used to specify
> > namespaces. For a pmem interleave set (possible cross several dimms),
> > at most one pmem namespace (and hence at most one label) is
> > allowed. Therefore, labels can not be used to partition pmem.
>
> Okay. But then how do particular ranges get associated with the
> owning guest(s)? Merely by SPA would seem rather fragile to me.
>
By using the file name, e.g. if I specify vnvdimm = [ 'file=/mnt/dax/foo' ]
in a domain config file, SPA occupied by /mnt/dax/foo are mapped to
the domain. If the same file is used every time the domain is created,
the same virtual device will be seen by that domain.
Thanks,
Haozhong
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