On 2/11/2020 3:40 PM, Jason Wang wrote:
On 2020/2/11 äå2:02, Liu, Jing2 wrote:
On 2/11/2020 12:02 PM, Jason Wang wrote:
On 2020/2/11 äå11:35, Liu, Jing2 wrote:
On 2/11/2020 11:17 AM, Jason Wang wrote:
Actually this bit *aims* for msi sharing or msi non-sharing.
On 2020/2/10 äå5:05, Zha Bin wrote:
From: Liu Jiang<gerry@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Userspace VMMs (e.g. Qemu microvm, Firecracker) take advantage of using
virtio over mmio devices as a lightweight machine model for modern
cloud. The standard virtio over MMIO transport layer only supports one
legacy interrupt, which is much heavier than virtio over PCI transport
layer using MSI. Legacy interrupt has long work path and causes specific
VMExits in following cases, which would considerably slow down the
performance:
1) read interrupt status register
2) update interrupt status register
3) write IOAPIC EOI register
We proposed to add MSI support for virtio over MMIO via new feature
bit VIRTIO_F_MMIO_MSI[1] which increases the interrupt performance.
With the VIRTIO_F_MMIO_MSI feature bit supported, the virtio-mmio MSI
uses msi_sharing[1] to indicate the event and vector mapping.
Bit 1 is 0: device uses non-sharing and fixed vector per event mapping.
Bit 1 is 1: device uses sharing mode and dynamic mapping.
I believe dynamic mapping should cover the case of fixed vector?
It means, when msi sharing bit is 1, device doesn't want vector per queue
(it wants msi vector sharing as name) and doesn't want a high interrupt rate.
So driver turns to !per_vq_vectors and has to do dynamical mapping.
So they are opposite not superset.
Thanks!
Jing
I think you need add more comments on the command.
E.g if I want to map vector 0 to queue 1, how do I need to do?
write(1, queue_sel);
write(0, vector_sel);
That's true. Besides, two commands are used for msi sharing mode,
VIRTIO_MMIO_MSI_CMD_MAP_CONFIG and VIRTIO_MMIO_MSI_CMD_MAP_QUEUE.
"To set up the event and vector mapping for MSI sharing mode, driver SHOULD write a valid MsiVecSel followed by VIRTIO_MMIO_MSI_CMD_MAP_CONFIG/VIRTIO_MMIO_MSI_CMD_MAP_QUEUE command to map the configuration change/selected queue events respectively. " (See spec patch 5/5)
So if driver detects the msi sharing mode, when it does setup vq, writes the queue_sel (this already exists in setup vq), vector sel and then MAP_QUEUE command to do the queue event mapping.
So actually the per vq msix could be done through this.
Right, per vq msix can also be mapped by the 2 commands if we want.
The current design benefits for those devices requesting per vq msi that driver
doesn't have to map during setup each queue,
since we define the relationship by default.
I don't get why you need to introduce MSI_SHARING_MASK which is the charge of driver instead of device.
MSI_SHARING_MASK is just for identifying the msi_sharing bit in readl(MsiState) (0x0c4). The device tells whether it wants msi_sharing.
MsiState register: R
le32 {
ÂÂÂ msi_enabled : 1;
ÂÂÂ msi_sharing: 1;
ÂÂÂ reserved : 30;
};
The interrupt rate should have no direct relationship with whether it has been shared or not.
Btw, you introduce mask/unmask without pending, how to deal with the lost interrupt during the masking then?
For msi non-sharing mode, no special action is needed because we make the rule of per_vq_vector and fixed relationship.
Correct me if this is not that clear for spec/code comments.
The ABI is not as straightforward as PCI did. Why not just reuse the PCI layout?
E.g having
queue_sel
queue_msix_vector
msix_config
for configuring map between msi vector and queues/config
Thanks for the advice. :)
Actually when looking into pci, the queue_msix_vector/msix_config is the msi vector index, which is the same as the mmio register MsiVecSel (0x0d0).
So we don't introduce two extra registers for mapping even in sharing mode.
What do you think?
Then
vector_sel
address
data
pending
mask
unmask
for configuring msi table?
PCI-like msix table is not introduced to device and instead simply use commands to tell the mask/configure/enable.
Thanks!
Jing
Thanks
Thanks!
Jing
?
Thanks
Thanks
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