Re: [RFC PATCH] PCI: Introduce new device binding path using pci_dev.driver_override
From: Greg KH
Date: Tue Apr 01 2014 - 12:45:25 EST
On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 10:28:54AM -0600, Alex Williamson wrote:
> The driver_override field allows us to specify the driver for a device
> rather than relying on the driver to provide a positive match of the
> device. This shortcuts the existing process of looking up the vendor
> and device ID, adding them to the driver new_id, binding the device,
> then removing the ID, but it also provides a couple advantages.
>
> First, the above process allows the driver to bind to any device
> matching the new_id for the window where it's enabled. This is often
> not desired, such as the case of trying to bind a single device to a
> meta driver like pci-stub or vfio-pci. Using driver_override we can
> do this deterministically using:
>
> echo pci-stub > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:03:00.0/driver_override
> echo 0000:03:00.0 > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:03:00.0/driver/unbind
> echo 0000:03:00.0 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers_probe
>
> Previously we could not invoke drivers_probe after adding a device
> to new_id for a driver as we get non-deterministic behavior whether
> the driver we intend or the standard driver will claim the device.
> Now it becomes a deterministic process, only the driver matching
> driver_override will probe the device.
>
> To return the device to the standard driver, we simply clear the
> driver_override and reprobe the device, ex:
>
> echo > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:03:00.0/preferred_driver
> echo 0000:03:00.0 > /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:03:00.0/driver/unbind
> echo 0000:03:00.0 > /sys/bus/pci/drivers_probe
>
> Another advantage to this approach is that we can specify a driver
> override to force a specific binding or prevent any binding. For
> instance when an IOMMU group is exposed to userspace through VFIO
> we require that all devices within that group are owned by VFIO.
> However, devices can be hot-added into an IOMMU group, in which case
> we want to prevent the device from binding to any driver (preferred
> driver = "none") or perhaps have it automatically bind to vfio-pci.
> With driver_override it's a simple matter for this field to be set
> internally when the device is first discovered to prevent driver
> matches.
>
> Signed-off-by: Alex Williamson <alex.williamson@xxxxxxxxxx>
> ---
>
> Apologies for the exceptionally long cc list, this is a follow-up to
> Stuart's "Subject: mechanism to allow a driver to bind to any device"
> thread. This is effectively a v2 of the proof-of-concept patch I
> posted in that thread. This version changes to use a dummy id struct
> to return on an "override" match, which removes the collateral damage
> and greatly simplifies the patch. This feels fairly well baked for
> PCI and I would expect that platform drivers could do a similar
> implementation. From there perhaps we can discuss whether there's
> any advantage to placing driver_override on struct device. The logic
> for incorporating it into the match still needs to happen per bus
> driver, so it might only contribute to consistency of the show/store
> sysfs attributes to move it up to struct device. Please comment.
> Thanks,
>
> Alex
>
> drivers/pci/pci-driver.c | 25 ++++++++++++++++++++++---
> drivers/pci/pci-sysfs.c | 40 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> include/linux/pci.h | 1 +
> 3 files changed, 63 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
No Documentation/ABI/ update to reflect the ABI you are creating?
thanks,
greg k-h
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