[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [RFC PATCH V1 01/12] hvm/ioreq: Make x86's IOREQ feature common
On 11/08/2020 00:34, Stefano Stabellini wrote: On Mon, 10 Aug 2020, Julien Grall wrote:On 07/08/2020 00:48, Stefano Stabellini wrote:On Thu, 6 Aug 2020, Julien Grall wrote:On 06/08/2020 01:37, Stefano Stabellini wrote:On Wed, 5 Aug 2020, Julien Grall wrote:On 04/08/2020 20:11, Stefano Stabellini wrote:On Tue, 4 Aug 2020, Julien Grall wrote:On 04/08/2020 12:10, Oleksandr wrote:On 04.08.20 10:45, Paul Durrant wrote:+static inline bool hvm_ioreq_needs_completion(const ioreq_t *ioreq) +{ + return ioreq->state == STATE_IOREQ_READY && + !ioreq->data_is_ptr && + (ioreq->type != IOREQ_TYPE_PIO || ioreq->dir != IOREQ_WRITE); +}I don't think having this in common code is correct. The short-cut of not completing PIO reads seems somewhat x86 specific.Hmmm, looking at the code, I think it doesn't wait for PIO writes to complete (not read). Did I miss anything?Does ARM evenhave the concept of PIO?I am not 100% sure here, but it seems that doesn't have.Technically, the PIOs exist on Arm, however they are accessed the same way as MMIO and will have a dedicated area defined by the HW. AFAICT, on Arm64, they are only used for PCI IO Bar. Now the question is whether we want to expose them to the Device Emulator as PIO or MMIO access. From a generic PoV, a DM shouldn't have to care about the architecture used. It should just be able to request a given IOport region. So it may make sense to differentiate them in the common ioreq code as well. I had a quick look at QEMU and wasn't able to tell if PIOs and MMIOs address space are different on Arm as well. Paul, Stefano, do you know what they are doing?On the QEMU side, it looks like PIO (address_space_io) is used in connection with the emulation of the "in" or "out" instructions, see ioport.c:cpu_inb for instance. Some parts of PCI on QEMU emulate PIO space regardless of the architecture, such as hw/pci/pci_bridge.c:pci_bridge_initfn. However, because there is no "in" and "out" on ARM, I don't think address_space_io can be accessed. Specifically, there is no equivalent for target/i386/misc_helper.c:helper_inb on ARM.So how PCI I/O BAR are accessed? Surely, they could be used on Arm, right?PIO is also memory mapped on ARM and it seems to have its own MMIO address window.This part is already well-understood :). However, this only tell us how an OS is accessing a PIO. What I am trying to figure out is how the hardware (or QEMU) is meant to work. From my understanding, the MMIO access will be received by the hostbridge and then forwarded to the appropriate PCI device. The two questions I am trying to answer is: How the I/O BARs are configured? Will it contain an MMIO address or an offset? If the answer is the latter, then we will need PIO because a DM will never see the MMIO address (the hostbridge will be emulated in Xen).Now I understand the question :-) This is the way I understand it works. Let's say that the PIO aperture is 0x1000-0x2000 which is aliased to 0x3eff0000-0x3eff1000. 0x1000-0x2000 are addresses that cannot be accessed directly. 0x3eff0000-0x3eff1000 is the range that works. A PCI device PIO BAR will have an address in the 0x1000-0x2000 range, for instance 0x1100. Are you sure about this? However, when the operating system access 0x1100, it will issue a read to 0x3eff0100. Xen will trap the read to 0x3eff0100 and send it to QEMU. QEMU has to know that 0x3eff0000-0x3eff1000 is the alias to the PIO aperture and that 0x3eff0100 correspond to PCI device foobar. Similarly, QEMU has also to know the address range of the MMIO aperture and its remappings, if any (it is possible to have address remapping for MMIO addresses too.) I think today this information is "built-in" QEMU, not configurable. It works fine because *I think* the PCI aperture is pretty much the same on x86 boards, at least the one supported by QEMU for Xen.Well on x86, the OS will access PIO using inb/outb. So the address received by Xen is 0x1000-0x2000 and then forwarded to the DM using the PIO type.On ARM, I think we should explicitly declare the PCI MMIO aperture and its alias/address-remapping. When we do that, we can also declare the PIO aperture and its alias/address-remapping.Well yes, we need to define PCI MMIO and PCI I/O region because the guest OS needs to know them.[1] (see below)However, I am unsure how this would help us to solve the question whether access to the PCI I/O aperture should be sent as a PIO or MMIO. Per what you wrote, the PCI I/O Bar would be configured with the range 0x1000-0x2000. So a device emulator (this may not be QEMU and only emulate one PCI device!!) will only see that range. How does the device-emulator then know that it needs to watch the region 0x3eff0000-0x3eff1000?It would know because the PCI PIO aperture, together with the alias, are specified [1]. Are you suggesting fix it in the ABI or pass it as runtime information to the Device Emulator? It feels to me that it would be easier/make more sense if the DM only say "I want to watch the PIO range 0x1000-0x2000". So Xen would be in charge to do the translation between the OS view and the DM view. This also means a DM would be completely arch-agnostic. This would follow the HW where you can plug your PCI card on any HW.As you know, PIO access is actually not modelled by QEMU for ARM targets. I worry about the long term stability of it, given that it is untested. I.e. qemu-system-aarch64 could have a broken PIO emulation and nobody would find out except for us when we send ioreqs to it. There are multiple references of PIO in the QEMU for Arm (see hw/arm/virt.c). So what do you mean by not modelled? Thinking from a Xen/Emulator interface on ARM, is it wise to rely on an access-type that doesn't exist on the architecture? The architecture doesn't define an instruction to access PIO, however this doesn't mean such access doesn't exist on the platform. For instance, PCI device may have I/O BAR. On Arm64, the hostbridge will be responsible to do the translation between the MMIO access to a PIO access for the PCI device. I have the impression that we disagree in what the Device Emulator is meant to do. IHMO, the goal of the device emulator is to emulate a device in an arch-agnostic way. Cheers, -- Julien Grall
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