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Re: [PATCH v9 Kernel 2/5] vfio iommu: Add ioctl defination to get dirty


From: Alex Williamson
Subject: Re: [PATCH v9 Kernel 2/5] vfio iommu: Add ioctl defination to get dirty pages bitmap.
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 2019 11:34:57 -0700

On Wed, 4 Dec 2019 23:40:25 +0530
Kirti Wankhede <address@hidden> wrote:

> On 12/3/2019 11:34 PM, Alex Williamson wrote:
> > On Mon, 25 Nov 2019 19:57:39 -0500
> > Yan Zhao <address@hidden> wrote:
> >   
> >> On Fri, Nov 15, 2019 at 05:06:25AM +0800, Alex Williamson wrote:  
> >>> On Fri, 15 Nov 2019 00:26:07 +0530
> >>> Kirti Wankhede <address@hidden> wrote:
> >>>      
> >>>> On 11/14/2019 1:37 AM, Alex Williamson wrote:  
> >>>>> On Thu, 14 Nov 2019 01:07:21 +0530
> >>>>> Kirti Wankhede <address@hidden> wrote:
> >>>>>        
> >>>>>> On 11/13/2019 4:00 AM, Alex Williamson wrote:  
> >>>>>>> On Tue, 12 Nov 2019 22:33:37 +0530
> >>>>>>> Kirti Wankhede <address@hidden> wrote:
> >>>>>>>           
> >>>>>>>> All pages pinned by vendor driver through vfio_pin_pages API should 
> >>>>>>>> be
> >>>>>>>> considered as dirty during migration. IOMMU container maintains a 
> >>>>>>>> list of
> >>>>>>>> all such pinned pages. Added an ioctl defination to get bitmap of 
> >>>>>>>> such  
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> definition
> >>>>>>>           
> >>>>>>>> pinned pages for requested IO virtual address range.  
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> Additionally, all mapped pages are considered dirty when physically
> >>>>>>> mapped through to an IOMMU, modulo we discussed devices opting in to
> >>>>>>> per page pinning to indicate finer granularity with a TBD mechanism to
> >>>>>>> figure out if any non-opt-in devices remain.
> >>>>>>>           
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> You mean, in case of device direct assignment (device pass through)?  
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Yes, or IOMMU backed mdevs.  If vfio_dmas in the container are fully
> >>>>> pinned and mapped, then the correct dirty page set is all mapped pages.
> >>>>> We discussed using the vpfn list as a mechanism for vendor drivers to
> >>>>> reduce their migration footprint, but we also discussed that we would
> >>>>> need a way to determine that all participants in the container have
> >>>>> explicitly pinned their working pages or else we must consider the
> >>>>> entire potential working set as dirty.
> >>>>>        
> >>>>
> >>>> How can vendor driver tell this capability to iommu module? Any 
> >>>> suggestions?  
> >>>
> >>> I think it does so by pinning pages.  Is it acceptable that if the
> >>> vendor driver pins any pages, then from that point forward we consider
> >>> the IOMMU group dirty page scope to be limited to pinned pages?  There  
> >> we should also be aware of that dirty page scope is pinned pages + 
> >> unpinned pages,
> >> which means ever since a page is pinned, it should be regarded as dirty
> >> no matter whether it's unpinned later. only after log_sync is called and
> >> dirty info retrieved, its dirty state should be cleared.  
> > 
> > Yes, good point.  We can't just remove a vpfn when a page is unpinned
> > or else we'd lose information that the page potentially had been
> > dirtied while it was pinned.  Maybe that vpfn needs to move to a dirty
> > list and both the currently pinned vpfns and the dirty vpfns are walked
> > on a log_sync.  The dirty vpfns list would be cleared after a log_sync.
> > The container would need to know that dirty tracking is enabled and
> > only manage the dirty vpfns list when necessary.  Thanks,
> >   
> 
> If page is unpinned, then that page is available in free page pool for 
> others to use, then how can we say that unpinned page has valid data?
> 
> If suppose, one driver A unpins a page and when driver B of some other 
> device gets that page and he pins it, uses it, and then unpins it, then 
> how can we say that page has valid data for driver A?
> 
> Can you give one example where unpinned page data is considered reliable 
> and valid?

We can only pin pages that the user has already allocated* and mapped
through the vfio DMA API.  The pinning of the page simply locks the
page for the vendor driver to access it and unpinning that page only
indicates that access is complete.  Pages are not freed when a vendor
driver unpins them, they still exist and at this point we're now
assuming the device dirtied the page while it was pinned.  Thanks,

Alex

* An exception here is that the page might be demand allocated and the
  act of pinning the page could actually allocate the backing page for
  the user if they have not faulted the page to trigger that allocation
  previously.  That page remains mapped for the user's virtual address
  space even after the unpinning though.




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