diff mbox series

[6/6] vhost-user: Have reset_status fall back to reset

Message ID 20230711155230.64277-7-hreitz@redhat.com
State New
Headers show
Series vhost-user: Add suspend/resume | expand

Commit Message

Hanna Czenczek July 11, 2023, 3:52 p.m. UTC
The only user of vhost_user_reset_status() is vhost_dev_stop(), which
only uses it as a fall-back to stop the back-end if it does not support
SUSPEND.  However, vhost-user's implementation is a no-op unless the
back-end supports SET_STATUS.

vhost-vdpa's implementation instead just calls
vhost_vdpa_reset_device(), implying that it's OK to fully reset the
device if SET_STATUS is not supported.

To be fair, vhost_vdpa_reset_device() does nothing but to set the status
to zero.  However, that may well be because vhost-vdpa has no method
besides this to reset a device.  In contrast, vhost-user has
RESET_DEVICE and a RESET_OWNER, which can be used instead.

While it is not entirely clear from documentation or git logs, from
discussions and the order of vhost-user protocol features, it appears to
me as if RESET_OWNER originally had no real meaning for vhost-user, and
was thus used to signal a device reset to the back-end.  Then,
RESET_DEVICE was introduced, to have a well-defined dedicated reset
command.  Finally, vhost-user received full STATUS support, including
SET_STATUS, so setting the device status to 0 is now the preferred way
of resetting a device.  Still, RESET_DEVICE and RESET_OWNER should
remain valid as fall-backs.

Therefore, have vhost_user_reset_status() fall back to
vhost_user_reset_device() if the back-end has no STATUS support.

Signed-off-by: Hanna Czenczek <hreitz@redhat.com>
---
 hw/virtio/vhost-user.c | 2 ++
 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)

Comments

Stefan Hajnoczi July 18, 2023, 3:10 p.m. UTC | #1
On Tue, Jul 11, 2023 at 05:52:28PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
> The only user of vhost_user_reset_status() is vhost_dev_stop(), which
> only uses it as a fall-back to stop the back-end if it does not support
> SUSPEND.  However, vhost-user's implementation is a no-op unless the
> back-end supports SET_STATUS.
> 
> vhost-vdpa's implementation instead just calls
> vhost_vdpa_reset_device(), implying that it's OK to fully reset the
> device if SET_STATUS is not supported.
> 
> To be fair, vhost_vdpa_reset_device() does nothing but to set the status
> to zero.  However, that may well be because vhost-vdpa has no method
> besides this to reset a device.  In contrast, vhost-user has
> RESET_DEVICE and a RESET_OWNER, which can be used instead.
> 
> While it is not entirely clear from documentation or git logs, from
> discussions and the order of vhost-user protocol features, it appears to
> me as if RESET_OWNER originally had no real meaning for vhost-user, and
> was thus used to signal a device reset to the back-end.  Then,
> RESET_DEVICE was introduced, to have a well-defined dedicated reset
> command.  Finally, vhost-user received full STATUS support, including
> SET_STATUS, so setting the device status to 0 is now the preferred way
> of resetting a device.  Still, RESET_DEVICE and RESET_OWNER should
> remain valid as fall-backs.
> 
> Therefore, have vhost_user_reset_status() fall back to
> vhost_user_reset_device() if the back-end has no STATUS support.
> 
> Signed-off-by: Hanna Czenczek <hreitz@redhat.com>
> ---
>  hw/virtio/vhost-user.c | 2 ++
>  1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
> 
> diff --git a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
> index 4507de5a92..53a881ec2a 100644
> --- a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
> +++ b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
> @@ -2833,6 +2833,8 @@ static void vhost_user_reset_status(struct vhost_dev *dev)
>      if (virtio_has_feature(dev->protocol_features,
>                             VHOST_USER_PROTOCOL_F_STATUS)) {
>          vhost_user_set_status(dev, 0);
> +    } else {
> +        vhost_user_reset_device(dev);
>      }
>  }

Did you check whether DPDK treats setting the status to 0 as equivalent
to RESET_DEVICE?

My understanding is that SET_STATUS is mostly ignored by vhost-user
back-ends today. Even those that implement it may not treat SET_STATUS 0
as equivalent to RESET_DEVICE.

If you decide it's safe to make this change, please also update
vhost-user.rst to document that front-ends should use SET_STATUS 0,
RESET_DEVICE, and RESET_OWNER in order of preference.

Stefan
Hanna Czenczek July 19, 2023, 2:11 p.m. UTC | #2
On 18.07.23 17:10, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 11, 2023 at 05:52:28PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
>> The only user of vhost_user_reset_status() is vhost_dev_stop(), which
>> only uses it as a fall-back to stop the back-end if it does not support
>> SUSPEND.  However, vhost-user's implementation is a no-op unless the
>> back-end supports SET_STATUS.
>>
>> vhost-vdpa's implementation instead just calls
>> vhost_vdpa_reset_device(), implying that it's OK to fully reset the
>> device if SET_STATUS is not supported.
>>
>> To be fair, vhost_vdpa_reset_device() does nothing but to set the status
>> to zero.  However, that may well be because vhost-vdpa has no method
>> besides this to reset a device.  In contrast, vhost-user has
>> RESET_DEVICE and a RESET_OWNER, which can be used instead.
>>
>> While it is not entirely clear from documentation or git logs, from
>> discussions and the order of vhost-user protocol features, it appears to
>> me as if RESET_OWNER originally had no real meaning for vhost-user, and
>> was thus used to signal a device reset to the back-end.  Then,
>> RESET_DEVICE was introduced, to have a well-defined dedicated reset
>> command.  Finally, vhost-user received full STATUS support, including
>> SET_STATUS, so setting the device status to 0 is now the preferred way
>> of resetting a device.  Still, RESET_DEVICE and RESET_OWNER should
>> remain valid as fall-backs.
>>
>> Therefore, have vhost_user_reset_status() fall back to
>> vhost_user_reset_device() if the back-end has no STATUS support.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Hanna Czenczek <hreitz@redhat.com>
>> ---
>>   hw/virtio/vhost-user.c | 2 ++
>>   1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
>>
>> diff --git a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>> index 4507de5a92..53a881ec2a 100644
>> --- a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>> +++ b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>> @@ -2833,6 +2833,8 @@ static void vhost_user_reset_status(struct vhost_dev *dev)
>>       if (virtio_has_feature(dev->protocol_features,
>>                              VHOST_USER_PROTOCOL_F_STATUS)) {
>>           vhost_user_set_status(dev, 0);
>> +    } else {
>> +        vhost_user_reset_device(dev);
>>       }
>>   }
> Did you check whether DPDK treats setting the status to 0 as equivalent
> to RESET_DEVICE?

If it doesn’t, what’s even the point of using reset_status?

I will investigate, but if there’s a difference, that makes the whole 
reset_* thing even more questionable to me than it has already been so far.

Hanna

> My understanding is that SET_STATUS is mostly ignored by vhost-user
> back-ends today. Even those that implement it may not treat SET_STATUS 0
> as equivalent to RESET_DEVICE.
>
> If you decide it's safe to make this change, please also update
> vhost-user.rst to document that front-ends should use SET_STATUS 0,
> RESET_DEVICE, and RESET_OWNER in order of preference.
>
> Stefan
Hanna Czenczek July 19, 2023, 2:27 p.m. UTC | #3
On 19.07.23 16:11, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
> On 18.07.23 17:10, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
>> On Tue, Jul 11, 2023 at 05:52:28PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
>>> The only user of vhost_user_reset_status() is vhost_dev_stop(), which
>>> only uses it as a fall-back to stop the back-end if it does not support
>>> SUSPEND.  However, vhost-user's implementation is a no-op unless the
>>> back-end supports SET_STATUS.
>>>
>>> vhost-vdpa's implementation instead just calls
>>> vhost_vdpa_reset_device(), implying that it's OK to fully reset the
>>> device if SET_STATUS is not supported.
>>>
>>> To be fair, vhost_vdpa_reset_device() does nothing but to set the 
>>> status
>>> to zero.  However, that may well be because vhost-vdpa has no method
>>> besides this to reset a device.  In contrast, vhost-user has
>>> RESET_DEVICE and a RESET_OWNER, which can be used instead.
>>>
>>> While it is not entirely clear from documentation or git logs, from
>>> discussions and the order of vhost-user protocol features, it 
>>> appears to
>>> me as if RESET_OWNER originally had no real meaning for vhost-user, and
>>> was thus used to signal a device reset to the back-end.  Then,
>>> RESET_DEVICE was introduced, to have a well-defined dedicated reset
>>> command.  Finally, vhost-user received full STATUS support, including
>>> SET_STATUS, so setting the device status to 0 is now the preferred way
>>> of resetting a device.  Still, RESET_DEVICE and RESET_OWNER should
>>> remain valid as fall-backs.
>>>
>>> Therefore, have vhost_user_reset_status() fall back to
>>> vhost_user_reset_device() if the back-end has no STATUS support.
>>>
>>> Signed-off-by: Hanna Czenczek <hreitz@redhat.com>
>>> ---
>>>   hw/virtio/vhost-user.c | 2 ++
>>>   1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
>>>
>>> diff --git a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>>> index 4507de5a92..53a881ec2a 100644
>>> --- a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>>> +++ b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>>> @@ -2833,6 +2833,8 @@ static void vhost_user_reset_status(struct 
>>> vhost_dev *dev)
>>>       if (virtio_has_feature(dev->protocol_features,
>>>                              VHOST_USER_PROTOCOL_F_STATUS)) {
>>>           vhost_user_set_status(dev, 0);
>>> +    } else {
>>> +        vhost_user_reset_device(dev);
>>>       }
>>>   }
>> Did you check whether DPDK treats setting the status to 0 as equivalent
>> to RESET_DEVICE?
>
> If it doesn’t, what’s even the point of using reset_status?

Sorry, I’m being unclear, and I think this may be important because it 
ties into the question from patch 1, what qemu is even trying to do by 
running SET_STATUS(0) vhost_dev_stop(), so here’s what gave me the 
impression that SET_STATUS(0) and RESET_DEVICE should be equivalent:

vhost-vdpa.c runs SET_STATUS(0) in a function called 
vhost_vdpa_reset_device().  This is one thing that gave me the 
impression that this is about an actual full reset.

Another is the whole discussion that we’ve had.  vhost_dev_stop() does 
not call a `vhost_reset_device()` function, it calls 
`vhost_reset_status()`.  Still, we were always talking about resetting 
the device.

It doesn’t make sense to me that vDPA would provide no function to fully 
reset a device, while vhost-user does.  Being able to reset a device 
sounds vital to me.  This also gave me the impression that SET_STATUS(0) 
on vDPA at least is functionally equivalent to a full device reset.

Maybe SET_STATUS(0) does mean a full device reset on vDPA, but not on 
vhost-user.  That would be a real shame, so I assumed this would not be 
the case; that SET_STATUS(0) does the same thing on both protocols.

The virtio specification says “Writing 0 into this field resets the 
device.” about the device_status field.

This also makes sense, because the device_status field is basically used 
to tell the device that a driver has taken control.  If reset, this 
indicates the driver has given up control, and to me this is a point 
where a device should fully reset itself.

So all in all, I can’t see the rationale why any implementation that 
supports SET_STATUS would decide to treat SET_STATUS(0) not as 
equivalent or a superset of RESET_DEVICE.  I may be wrong, and this 
might explain a whole deal about what kind of background operations we 
hope to stop with SET_STATUS(0).

Hanna
Stefan Hajnoczi July 20, 2023, 4:03 p.m. UTC | #4
On Wed, Jul 19, 2023 at 04:27:58PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
> On 19.07.23 16:11, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
> > On 18.07.23 17:10, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
> > > On Tue, Jul 11, 2023 at 05:52:28PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
> > > > The only user of vhost_user_reset_status() is vhost_dev_stop(), which
> > > > only uses it as a fall-back to stop the back-end if it does not support
> > > > SUSPEND.  However, vhost-user's implementation is a no-op unless the
> > > > back-end supports SET_STATUS.
> > > > 
> > > > vhost-vdpa's implementation instead just calls
> > > > vhost_vdpa_reset_device(), implying that it's OK to fully reset the
> > > > device if SET_STATUS is not supported.
> > > > 
> > > > To be fair, vhost_vdpa_reset_device() does nothing but to set
> > > > the status
> > > > to zero.  However, that may well be because vhost-vdpa has no method
> > > > besides this to reset a device.  In contrast, vhost-user has
> > > > RESET_DEVICE and a RESET_OWNER, which can be used instead.
> > > > 
> > > > While it is not entirely clear from documentation or git logs, from
> > > > discussions and the order of vhost-user protocol features, it
> > > > appears to
> > > > me as if RESET_OWNER originally had no real meaning for vhost-user, and
> > > > was thus used to signal a device reset to the back-end.  Then,
> > > > RESET_DEVICE was introduced, to have a well-defined dedicated reset
> > > > command.  Finally, vhost-user received full STATUS support, including
> > > > SET_STATUS, so setting the device status to 0 is now the preferred way
> > > > of resetting a device.  Still, RESET_DEVICE and RESET_OWNER should
> > > > remain valid as fall-backs.
> > > > 
> > > > Therefore, have vhost_user_reset_status() fall back to
> > > > vhost_user_reset_device() if the back-end has no STATUS support.
> > > > 
> > > > Signed-off-by: Hanna Czenczek <hreitz@redhat.com>
> > > > ---
> > > >   hw/virtio/vhost-user.c | 2 ++
> > > >   1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
> > > > 
> > > > diff --git a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
> > > > index 4507de5a92..53a881ec2a 100644
> > > > --- a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
> > > > +++ b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
> > > > @@ -2833,6 +2833,8 @@ static void vhost_user_reset_status(struct
> > > > vhost_dev *dev)
> > > >       if (virtio_has_feature(dev->protocol_features,
> > > >                              VHOST_USER_PROTOCOL_F_STATUS)) {
> > > >           vhost_user_set_status(dev, 0);
> > > > +    } else {
> > > > +        vhost_user_reset_device(dev);
> > > >       }
> > > >   }
> > > Did you check whether DPDK treats setting the status to 0 as equivalent
> > > to RESET_DEVICE?
> > 
> > If it doesn’t, what’s even the point of using reset_status?
> 
> Sorry, I’m being unclear, and I think this may be important because it ties
> into the question from patch 1, what qemu is even trying to do by running
> SET_STATUS(0) vhost_dev_stop(), so here’s what gave me the impression that
> SET_STATUS(0) and RESET_DEVICE should be equivalent:
> 
> vhost-vdpa.c runs SET_STATUS(0) in a function called
> vhost_vdpa_reset_device().  This is one thing that gave me the impression
> that this is about an actual full reset.
> 
> Another is the whole discussion that we’ve had.  vhost_dev_stop() does not
> call a `vhost_reset_device()` function, it calls `vhost_reset_status()`. 
> Still, we were always talking about resetting the device.

There is some hacky stuff with struct vhost_dev's vq_index_end and
multi-queue devices. I think it's because multi-queue vhost-net device
consist of many vhost_devs and NetClientStates, so certain vhost
operations are skipped unless this is the "first" or "last" vhost_dev
from a large aggregate vhost-net device. That might be responsible for
part of the weirdness.

> 
> It doesn’t make sense to me that vDPA would provide no function to fully
> reset a device, while vhost-user does.  Being able to reset a device sounds
> vital to me.  This also gave me the impression that SET_STATUS(0) on vDPA at
> least is functionally equivalent to a full device reset.
> 
> 
> Maybe SET_STATUS(0) does mean a full device reset on vDPA, but not on
> vhost-user.  That would be a real shame, so I assumed this would not be the
> case; that SET_STATUS(0) does the same thing on both protocols.

Yes, exactly. It has the real VIRTIO spec meaning in vDPA. In vhost-user
it's currently only used by DPDK as a hint for when device
initialization is complete:
https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/commit/41d201804c4c44738168e2d247d3b1780845faa1

> The virtio specification says “Writing 0 into this field resets the device.”
> about the device_status field.
> 
> This also makes sense, because the device_status field is basically used to
> tell the device that a driver has taken control.  If reset, this indicates
> the driver has given up control, and to me this is a point where a device
> should fully reset itself.
> 
> So all in all, I can’t see the rationale why any implementation that
> supports SET_STATUS would decide to treat SET_STATUS(0) not as equivalent or
> a superset of RESET_DEVICE.  I may be wrong, and this might explain a whole
> deal about what kind of background operations we hope to stop with
> SET_STATUS(0).

I would like vhost-user devices to implement SET_STATUS according to the
VIRTIO specification in the future and they can do that. But I think
front-ends should continue sending RESET_DEVICE in order to support old
devices.

Stefan
Hanna Czenczek July 21, 2023, 2:16 p.m. UTC | #5
On 20.07.23 18:03, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 19, 2023 at 04:27:58PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
>> On 19.07.23 16:11, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
>>> On 18.07.23 17:10, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
>>>> On Tue, Jul 11, 2023 at 05:52:28PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
>>>>> The only user of vhost_user_reset_status() is vhost_dev_stop(), which
>>>>> only uses it as a fall-back to stop the back-end if it does not support
>>>>> SUSPEND.  However, vhost-user's implementation is a no-op unless the
>>>>> back-end supports SET_STATUS.
>>>>>
>>>>> vhost-vdpa's implementation instead just calls
>>>>> vhost_vdpa_reset_device(), implying that it's OK to fully reset the
>>>>> device if SET_STATUS is not supported.
>>>>>
>>>>> To be fair, vhost_vdpa_reset_device() does nothing but to set
>>>>> the status
>>>>> to zero.  However, that may well be because vhost-vdpa has no method
>>>>> besides this to reset a device.  In contrast, vhost-user has
>>>>> RESET_DEVICE and a RESET_OWNER, which can be used instead.
>>>>>
>>>>> While it is not entirely clear from documentation or git logs, from
>>>>> discussions and the order of vhost-user protocol features, it
>>>>> appears to
>>>>> me as if RESET_OWNER originally had no real meaning for vhost-user, and
>>>>> was thus used to signal a device reset to the back-end.  Then,
>>>>> RESET_DEVICE was introduced, to have a well-defined dedicated reset
>>>>> command.  Finally, vhost-user received full STATUS support, including
>>>>> SET_STATUS, so setting the device status to 0 is now the preferred way
>>>>> of resetting a device.  Still, RESET_DEVICE and RESET_OWNER should
>>>>> remain valid as fall-backs.
>>>>>
>>>>> Therefore, have vhost_user_reset_status() fall back to
>>>>> vhost_user_reset_device() if the back-end has no STATUS support.
>>>>>
>>>>> Signed-off-by: Hanna Czenczek <hreitz@redhat.com>
>>>>> ---
>>>>>    hw/virtio/vhost-user.c | 2 ++
>>>>>    1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
>>>>>
>>>>> diff --git a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>>>>> index 4507de5a92..53a881ec2a 100644
>>>>> --- a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>>>>> +++ b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>>>>> @@ -2833,6 +2833,8 @@ static void vhost_user_reset_status(struct
>>>>> vhost_dev *dev)
>>>>>        if (virtio_has_feature(dev->protocol_features,
>>>>>                               VHOST_USER_PROTOCOL_F_STATUS)) {
>>>>>            vhost_user_set_status(dev, 0);
>>>>> +    } else {
>>>>> +        vhost_user_reset_device(dev);
>>>>>        }
>>>>>    }
>>>> Did you check whether DPDK treats setting the status to 0 as equivalent
>>>> to RESET_DEVICE?
>>> If it doesn’t, what’s even the point of using reset_status?
>> Sorry, I’m being unclear, and I think this may be important because it ties
>> into the question from patch 1, what qemu is even trying to do by running
>> SET_STATUS(0) vhost_dev_stop(), so here’s what gave me the impression that
>> SET_STATUS(0) and RESET_DEVICE should be equivalent:
>>
>> vhost-vdpa.c runs SET_STATUS(0) in a function called
>> vhost_vdpa_reset_device().  This is one thing that gave me the impression
>> that this is about an actual full reset.
>>
>> Another is the whole discussion that we’ve had.  vhost_dev_stop() does not
>> call a `vhost_reset_device()` function, it calls `vhost_reset_status()`.
>> Still, we were always talking about resetting the device.
> There is some hacky stuff with struct vhost_dev's vq_index_end and
> multi-queue devices. I think it's because multi-queue vhost-net device
> consist of many vhost_devs and NetClientStates, so certain vhost
> operations are skipped unless this is the "first" or "last" vhost_dev
> from a large aggregate vhost-net device. That might be responsible for
> part of the weirdness.
>
>> It doesn’t make sense to me that vDPA would provide no function to fully
>> reset a device, while vhost-user does.  Being able to reset a device sounds
>> vital to me.  This also gave me the impression that SET_STATUS(0) on vDPA at
>> least is functionally equivalent to a full device reset.
>>
>>
>> Maybe SET_STATUS(0) does mean a full device reset on vDPA, but not on
>> vhost-user.  That would be a real shame, so I assumed this would not be the
>> case; that SET_STATUS(0) does the same thing on both protocols.
> Yes, exactly. It has the real VIRTIO spec meaning in vDPA. In vhost-user
> it's currently only used by DPDK as a hint for when device
> initialization is complete:
> https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/commit/41d201804c4c44738168e2d247d3b1780845faa1

FWIW, now the code is a bit different. 
https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/commit/671cc679a5fcd26705bb20ddc13b93e665719054 
has added a RESET interpretation for the status field, i.e. when it is 
0.  It doesn’t do anything, but at least DPDK seems to agree that 
SET_STATUS(0) is a reset.

>> The virtio specification says “Writing 0 into this field resets the device.”
>> about the device_status field.
>>
>> This also makes sense, because the device_status field is basically used to
>> tell the device that a driver has taken control.  If reset, this indicates
>> the driver has given up control, and to me this is a point where a device
>> should fully reset itself.
>>
>> So all in all, I can’t see the rationale why any implementation that
>> supports SET_STATUS would decide to treat SET_STATUS(0) not as equivalent or
>> a superset of RESET_DEVICE.  I may be wrong, and this might explain a whole
>> deal about what kind of background operations we hope to stop with
>> SET_STATUS(0).
> I would like vhost-user devices to implement SET_STATUS according to the
> VIRTIO specification in the future and they can do that. But I think
> front-ends should continue sending RESET_DEVICE in order to support old
> devices.

Well, yes, exactly.  That is what I meant to address with this patch, 
vhost-user right now does not send RESET_DEVICE in its 
vhost_reset_status implementation, so the front-end will not fall back 
to RESET_DEVICE when it apparently does intend to reset the device[1].  
We do arguably have vhost_reset_device, too, but for vDPA that is just a 
SET_STATUS(0) (there is no RESET_DEVICE on vDPA), and it’s also only 
called by vhost-user-scsi.

So this also begs the question why we even do have vhost_reset_status 
and vhost_reset_device as two separate things. The commit introducing 
vhost_reset_status (c3716f260bf) doesn’t say.  Maybe the intention was 
that vhost_reset_device would leave the status at 0, while 
vhost_reset_status would return it to ACKNOWLEDGE | DRIVER, as done by 
the introducing commit, but that comes back to patch 5 in this series – 
we don’t need to have ACKNOWLEDGE | DRIVER set after vhost_dev_stop(), 
so we don’t need vhost_reset_status to set those flags.  They should be 
set in vhost_dev_start().

[1] This is assuming that SET_STATUS(0) is intended to reset the device, 
but it sounds like you agree on that.
Stefan Hajnoczi July 24, 2023, 6:04 p.m. UTC | #6
On Fri, Jul 21, 2023 at 04:16:07PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
> On 20.07.23 18:03, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
> > On Wed, Jul 19, 2023 at 04:27:58PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
> > > On 19.07.23 16:11, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
> > > > On 18.07.23 17:10, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
> > > > > On Tue, Jul 11, 2023 at 05:52:28PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
> > > > > > The only user of vhost_user_reset_status() is vhost_dev_stop(), which
> > > > > > only uses it as a fall-back to stop the back-end if it does not support
> > > > > > SUSPEND.  However, vhost-user's implementation is a no-op unless the
> > > > > > back-end supports SET_STATUS.
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > vhost-vdpa's implementation instead just calls
> > > > > > vhost_vdpa_reset_device(), implying that it's OK to fully reset the
> > > > > > device if SET_STATUS is not supported.
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > To be fair, vhost_vdpa_reset_device() does nothing but to set
> > > > > > the status
> > > > > > to zero.  However, that may well be because vhost-vdpa has no method
> > > > > > besides this to reset a device.  In contrast, vhost-user has
> > > > > > RESET_DEVICE and a RESET_OWNER, which can be used instead.
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > While it is not entirely clear from documentation or git logs, from
> > > > > > discussions and the order of vhost-user protocol features, it
> > > > > > appears to
> > > > > > me as if RESET_OWNER originally had no real meaning for vhost-user, and
> > > > > > was thus used to signal a device reset to the back-end.  Then,
> > > > > > RESET_DEVICE was introduced, to have a well-defined dedicated reset
> > > > > > command.  Finally, vhost-user received full STATUS support, including
> > > > > > SET_STATUS, so setting the device status to 0 is now the preferred way
> > > > > > of resetting a device.  Still, RESET_DEVICE and RESET_OWNER should
> > > > > > remain valid as fall-backs.
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > Therefore, have vhost_user_reset_status() fall back to
> > > > > > vhost_user_reset_device() if the back-end has no STATUS support.
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > Signed-off-by: Hanna Czenczek <hreitz@redhat.com>
> > > > > > ---
> > > > > >    hw/virtio/vhost-user.c | 2 ++
> > > > > >    1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
> > > > > > 
> > > > > > diff --git a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
> > > > > > index 4507de5a92..53a881ec2a 100644
> > > > > > --- a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
> > > > > > +++ b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
> > > > > > @@ -2833,6 +2833,8 @@ static void vhost_user_reset_status(struct
> > > > > > vhost_dev *dev)
> > > > > >        if (virtio_has_feature(dev->protocol_features,
> > > > > >                               VHOST_USER_PROTOCOL_F_STATUS)) {
> > > > > >            vhost_user_set_status(dev, 0);
> > > > > > +    } else {
> > > > > > +        vhost_user_reset_device(dev);
> > > > > >        }
> > > > > >    }
> > > > > Did you check whether DPDK treats setting the status to 0 as equivalent
> > > > > to RESET_DEVICE?
> > > > If it doesn’t, what’s even the point of using reset_status?
> > > Sorry, I’m being unclear, and I think this may be important because it ties
> > > into the question from patch 1, what qemu is even trying to do by running
> > > SET_STATUS(0) vhost_dev_stop(), so here’s what gave me the impression that
> > > SET_STATUS(0) and RESET_DEVICE should be equivalent:
> > > 
> > > vhost-vdpa.c runs SET_STATUS(0) in a function called
> > > vhost_vdpa_reset_device().  This is one thing that gave me the impression
> > > that this is about an actual full reset.
> > > 
> > > Another is the whole discussion that we’ve had.  vhost_dev_stop() does not
> > > call a `vhost_reset_device()` function, it calls `vhost_reset_status()`.
> > > Still, we were always talking about resetting the device.
> > There is some hacky stuff with struct vhost_dev's vq_index_end and
> > multi-queue devices. I think it's because multi-queue vhost-net device
> > consist of many vhost_devs and NetClientStates, so certain vhost
> > operations are skipped unless this is the "first" or "last" vhost_dev
> > from a large aggregate vhost-net device. That might be responsible for
> > part of the weirdness.
> > 
> > > It doesn’t make sense to me that vDPA would provide no function to fully
> > > reset a device, while vhost-user does.  Being able to reset a device sounds
> > > vital to me.  This also gave me the impression that SET_STATUS(0) on vDPA at
> > > least is functionally equivalent to a full device reset.
> > > 
> > > 
> > > Maybe SET_STATUS(0) does mean a full device reset on vDPA, but not on
> > > vhost-user.  That would be a real shame, so I assumed this would not be the
> > > case; that SET_STATUS(0) does the same thing on both protocols.
> > Yes, exactly. It has the real VIRTIO spec meaning in vDPA. In vhost-user
> > it's currently only used by DPDK as a hint for when device
> > initialization is complete:
> > https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/commit/41d201804c4c44738168e2d247d3b1780845faa1
> 
> FWIW, now the code is a bit different.
> https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/commit/671cc679a5fcd26705bb20ddc13b93e665719054
> has added a RESET interpretation for the status field, i.e. when it is 0. 
> It doesn’t do anything, but at least DPDK seems to agree that SET_STATUS(0)
> is a reset.

That patch adds diagnostics but does not perform any action for
SET_STATUS 0. DPDK's vhost_user_reset_owner() is still the only place
where the device is actually reset. QEMU cannot switch to just
SET_STATUS 0, it still needs to send RESET_DEVICE/RESET_OWNER.

> 
> > > The virtio specification says “Writing 0 into this field resets the device.”
> > > about the device_status field.
> > > 
> > > This also makes sense, because the device_status field is basically used to
> > > tell the device that a driver has taken control.  If reset, this indicates
> > > the driver has given up control, and to me this is a point where a device
> > > should fully reset itself.
> > > 
> > > So all in all, I can’t see the rationale why any implementation that
> > > supports SET_STATUS would decide to treat SET_STATUS(0) not as equivalent or
> > > a superset of RESET_DEVICE.  I may be wrong, and this might explain a whole
> > > deal about what kind of background operations we hope to stop with
> > > SET_STATUS(0).
> > I would like vhost-user devices to implement SET_STATUS according to the
> > VIRTIO specification in the future and they can do that. But I think
> > front-ends should continue sending RESET_DEVICE in order to support old
> > devices.
> 
> Well, yes, exactly.  That is what I meant to address with this patch,
> vhost-user right now does not send RESET_DEVICE in its vhost_reset_status
> implementation, so the front-end will not fall back to RESET_DEVICE when it
> apparently does intend to reset the device[1].  We do arguably have
> vhost_reset_device, too, but for vDPA that is just a SET_STATUS(0) (there is
> no RESET_DEVICE on vDPA), and it’s also only called by vhost-user-scsi.
> 
> So this also begs the question why we even do have vhost_reset_status and
> vhost_reset_device as two separate things. The commit introducing
> vhost_reset_status (c3716f260bf) doesn’t say.  Maybe the intention was that
> vhost_reset_device would leave the status at 0, while vhost_reset_status
> would return it to ACKNOWLEDGE | DRIVER, as done by the introducing commit,
> but that comes back to patch 5 in this series – we don’t need to have
> ACKNOWLEDGE | DRIVER set after vhost_dev_stop(), so we don’t need
> vhost_reset_status to set those flags.  They should be set in
> vhost_dev_start().
> 
> [1] This is assuming that SET_STATUS(0) is intended to reset the device, but
> it sounds like you agree on that.

I don't know the answers, but I think it's safe to go ahead with a
SET_STATUS sequence that follows the VIRTIO spec, plus a
VHOST_USER_RESET_DEVICE/VHOST_USER_RESET_OWNER.

Stefan
Hanna Czenczek July 25, 2023, 8:39 a.m. UTC | #7
On 24.07.23 20:04, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 21, 2023 at 04:16:07PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
>> On 20.07.23 18:03, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
>>> On Wed, Jul 19, 2023 at 04:27:58PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
>>>> On 19.07.23 16:11, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
>>>>> On 18.07.23 17:10, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
>>>>>> On Tue, Jul 11, 2023 at 05:52:28PM +0200, Hanna Czenczek wrote:
>>>>>>> The only user of vhost_user_reset_status() is vhost_dev_stop(), which
>>>>>>> only uses it as a fall-back to stop the back-end if it does not support
>>>>>>> SUSPEND.  However, vhost-user's implementation is a no-op unless the
>>>>>>> back-end supports SET_STATUS.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> vhost-vdpa's implementation instead just calls
>>>>>>> vhost_vdpa_reset_device(), implying that it's OK to fully reset the
>>>>>>> device if SET_STATUS is not supported.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> To be fair, vhost_vdpa_reset_device() does nothing but to set
>>>>>>> the status
>>>>>>> to zero.  However, that may well be because vhost-vdpa has no method
>>>>>>> besides this to reset a device.  In contrast, vhost-user has
>>>>>>> RESET_DEVICE and a RESET_OWNER, which can be used instead.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> While it is not entirely clear from documentation or git logs, from
>>>>>>> discussions and the order of vhost-user protocol features, it
>>>>>>> appears to
>>>>>>> me as if RESET_OWNER originally had no real meaning for vhost-user, and
>>>>>>> was thus used to signal a device reset to the back-end.  Then,
>>>>>>> RESET_DEVICE was introduced, to have a well-defined dedicated reset
>>>>>>> command.  Finally, vhost-user received full STATUS support, including
>>>>>>> SET_STATUS, so setting the device status to 0 is now the preferred way
>>>>>>> of resetting a device.  Still, RESET_DEVICE and RESET_OWNER should
>>>>>>> remain valid as fall-backs.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Therefore, have vhost_user_reset_status() fall back to
>>>>>>> vhost_user_reset_device() if the back-end has no STATUS support.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Signed-off-by: Hanna Czenczek <hreitz@redhat.com>
>>>>>>> ---
>>>>>>>     hw/virtio/vhost-user.c | 2 ++
>>>>>>>     1 file changed, 2 insertions(+)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> diff --git a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>>>>>>> index 4507de5a92..53a881ec2a 100644
>>>>>>> --- a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>>>>>>> +++ b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
>>>>>>> @@ -2833,6 +2833,8 @@ static void vhost_user_reset_status(struct
>>>>>>> vhost_dev *dev)
>>>>>>>         if (virtio_has_feature(dev->protocol_features,
>>>>>>>                                VHOST_USER_PROTOCOL_F_STATUS)) {
>>>>>>>             vhost_user_set_status(dev, 0);
>>>>>>> +    } else {
>>>>>>> +        vhost_user_reset_device(dev);
>>>>>>>         }
>>>>>>>     }
>>>>>> Did you check whether DPDK treats setting the status to 0 as equivalent
>>>>>> to RESET_DEVICE?
>>>>> If it doesn’t, what’s even the point of using reset_status?
>>>> Sorry, I’m being unclear, and I think this may be important because it ties
>>>> into the question from patch 1, what qemu is even trying to do by running
>>>> SET_STATUS(0) vhost_dev_stop(), so here’s what gave me the impression that
>>>> SET_STATUS(0) and RESET_DEVICE should be equivalent:
>>>>
>>>> vhost-vdpa.c runs SET_STATUS(0) in a function called
>>>> vhost_vdpa_reset_device().  This is one thing that gave me the impression
>>>> that this is about an actual full reset.
>>>>
>>>> Another is the whole discussion that we’ve had.  vhost_dev_stop() does not
>>>> call a `vhost_reset_device()` function, it calls `vhost_reset_status()`.
>>>> Still, we were always talking about resetting the device.
>>> There is some hacky stuff with struct vhost_dev's vq_index_end and
>>> multi-queue devices. I think it's because multi-queue vhost-net device
>>> consist of many vhost_devs and NetClientStates, so certain vhost
>>> operations are skipped unless this is the "first" or "last" vhost_dev
>>> from a large aggregate vhost-net device. That might be responsible for
>>> part of the weirdness.
>>>
>>>> It doesn’t make sense to me that vDPA would provide no function to fully
>>>> reset a device, while vhost-user does.  Being able to reset a device sounds
>>>> vital to me.  This also gave me the impression that SET_STATUS(0) on vDPA at
>>>> least is functionally equivalent to a full device reset.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Maybe SET_STATUS(0) does mean a full device reset on vDPA, but not on
>>>> vhost-user.  That would be a real shame, so I assumed this would not be the
>>>> case; that SET_STATUS(0) does the same thing on both protocols.
>>> Yes, exactly. It has the real VIRTIO spec meaning in vDPA. In vhost-user
>>> it's currently only used by DPDK as a hint for when device
>>> initialization is complete:
>>> https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/commit/41d201804c4c44738168e2d247d3b1780845faa1
>> FWIW, now the code is a bit different.
>> https://github.com/DPDK/dpdk/commit/671cc679a5fcd26705bb20ddc13b93e665719054
>> has added a RESET interpretation for the status field, i.e. when it is 0.
>> It doesn’t do anything, but at least DPDK seems to agree that SET_STATUS(0)
>> is a reset.
> That patch adds diagnostics but does not perform any action for
> SET_STATUS 0. DPDK's vhost_user_reset_owner() is still the only place
> where the device is actually reset.

That’s what I said, it doesn’t do anything, but the diagnostics agree 
that it is a RESET.

> QEMU cannot switch to just
> SET_STATUS 0, it still needs to send RESET_DEVICE/RESET_OWNER.

That is what I questioned below: We currently *do not* call 
RESET_DEVICE/RESET_OWNER.  This patch is not about switching to 
SET_STATUS(0), it is about having RESET_DEVICE/RESET_OWNER be fallbacks 
for it.

>>>> The virtio specification says “Writing 0 into this field resets the device.”
>>>> about the device_status field.
>>>>
>>>> This also makes sense, because the device_status field is basically used to
>>>> tell the device that a driver has taken control.  If reset, this indicates
>>>> the driver has given up control, and to me this is a point where a device
>>>> should fully reset itself.
>>>>
>>>> So all in all, I can’t see the rationale why any implementation that
>>>> supports SET_STATUS would decide to treat SET_STATUS(0) not as equivalent or
>>>> a superset of RESET_DEVICE.  I may be wrong, and this might explain a whole
>>>> deal about what kind of background operations we hope to stop with
>>>> SET_STATUS(0).
>>> I would like vhost-user devices to implement SET_STATUS according to the
>>> VIRTIO specification in the future and they can do that. But I think
>>> front-ends should continue sending RESET_DEVICE in order to support old
>>> devices.
>> Well, yes, exactly.  That is what I meant to address with this patch,
>> vhost-user right now does not send RESET_DEVICE in its vhost_reset_status
>> implementation, so the front-end will not fall back to RESET_DEVICE when it
>> apparently does intend to reset the device[1].  We do arguably have
>> vhost_reset_device, too, but for vDPA that is just a SET_STATUS(0) (there is
>> no RESET_DEVICE on vDPA), and it’s also only called by vhost-user-scsi.
>>
>> So this also begs the question why we even do have vhost_reset_status and
>> vhost_reset_device as two separate things. The commit introducing
>> vhost_reset_status (c3716f260bf) doesn’t say.  Maybe the intention was that
>> vhost_reset_device would leave the status at 0, while vhost_reset_status
>> would return it to ACKNOWLEDGE | DRIVER, as done by the introducing commit,
>> but that comes back to patch 5 in this series – we don’t need to have
>> ACKNOWLEDGE | DRIVER set after vhost_dev_stop(), so we don’t need
>> vhost_reset_status to set those flags.  They should be set in
>> vhost_dev_start().
>>
>> [1] This is assuming that SET_STATUS(0) is intended to reset the device, but
>> it sounds like you agree on that.
> I don't know the answers, but I think it's safe to go ahead with a
> SET_STATUS sequence that follows the VIRTIO spec, plus a
> VHOST_USER_RESET_DEVICE/VHOST_USER_RESET_OWNER.

So what you’re saying is that RESET_DEVICE/RESET_OWNER should not be 
fallbacks, but be invoked in addition to SET_STATUS(0)?

If so, that would be silly.  I see your point that DPDK resets only in 
response to RESET_DEVICE/RESET_OWNER, but the diagnostics agree that 
SET_STATUS(0) is a reset, which is why I find this so silly. It sounds 
to me as if any properly behaving implementation would fully reset the 
back-end on SET_STATUS(0), so unconditionally invoking 
RESET_DEVICE/RESET_OWNER afterwards is just doing a double-reset.

Notably, invoking RESET_DEVICE/RESET_OWNER in addition to SET_STATUS(0) 
(instead of as a fallback) would be a change in behavior, because we do 
not call RESET_DEVICE/RESET_OWNER outside of vhost-user-scsi today.

Hanna
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
index 4507de5a92..53a881ec2a 100644
--- a/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
+++ b/hw/virtio/vhost-user.c
@@ -2833,6 +2833,8 @@  static void vhost_user_reset_status(struct vhost_dev *dev)
     if (virtio_has_feature(dev->protocol_features,
                            VHOST_USER_PROTOCOL_F_STATUS)) {
         vhost_user_set_status(dev, 0);
+    } else {
+        vhost_user_reset_device(dev);
     }
 }