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Subject: Re: [virtio-dev] Next VirtIO device for Project Stratos?
* Stefan Hajnoczi (stefanha@redhat.com) wrote: > On Sat, Sep 03, 2022 at 07:43:08AM +0000, Alyssa Ross wrote: > > Hi Alex and everyone else, just catching up on some mail and wanted to > > clarify some things: > > > > Alex Bennée <alex.bennee@linaro.org> writes: > > > > > This email is driven by a brain storming session at a recent sprint > > > where we considered what VirtIO devices we should look at implementing > > > next. I ended up going through all the assigned device IDs hunting for > > > missing spec discussion and existing drivers so I'd welcome feedback > > > from anybody actively using them - especially as my suppositions about > > > device types I'm not familiar with may be way off! > > > > > > [...snip...] > > > > > > GPU device / 16 > > > --------------- > > > > > > This is now a fairly mature part of the spec and has implementations is > > > the kernel, QEMU and a vhost-user backend. However as is commensurate > > > with the complexity of GPUs there is ongoing development moving from the > > > VirGL OpenGL encapsulation to a thing called GFXSTREAM which is meant to > > > make some things easier. > > > > > > A potential area of interest here is working out what the differences > > > are in use cases between virtio-gpu and virtio-wayland. virtio-wayland > > > is currently a ChromeOS only invention so hasn't seen any upstreaming or > > > specification work but may make more sense where multiple VMs are > > > drawing only elements of a final display which is composited by a master > > > program. For further reading see Alyssa's write-up: > > > > > > https://alyssa.is/using-virtio-wl/ > > > > > > I'm not sure how widely used the existing vhost-user backend is for > > > virtio-gpu but it could present an opportunity for a more beefy rust-vmm > > > backend implementation? > > > > As I understand it, virtio-wayland is effectively deprecated in favour > > of sending Wayland messages over cross-domain virtio-gpu contexts. It's > > possible to do this now with an upstream kernel, whereas virtio-wayland > > always required a custom driver in the Chromium kernel. > > > > But crosvm is still the only implementation of a virtio-gpu device that > > supports Wayland over cross-domain contexts, so it would be great to see > > a more generic implementation. Especially because, while crosvm can > > share its virtio-gpu device over vhost-user, it does so in a way that's > > incompatible with the standardised vhost-user-gpu as implemented by > > QEMU. When I asked the crosvm developers in their Matrix channel what > > it would take to use the standard vhost-user-gpu variant, they said that > > the standard variant was lacking functionality they needed, like mapping > > and unmapping GPU buffers into the guest. > > That sounds somewhat similar to virtiofs and its DAX Window, which needs > vhost-user protocol extensions because of how memory is handled. David > Gilbert wrote the QEMU virtiofs DAX patches, which are under > development. > > I took a quick look at the virtio-gpu specs. If the crosvm behavior you > mentioned is covered in the VIRTIO spec then I guess it's the "host > visible memory region"? > > (If it's not in the VIRTIO spec then a spec change needs to be proposed > first and a vhost-user protocol spec change can then support that new > virtio-gpu feature.) > > The VIRTIO_GPU_CMD_RESOURCE_MAP_BLOB command maps the device's resource > into the host visible memory region so that the driver can see it. > > The virtiofs DAX window uses vhost-user slave channel messages to > provide file descriptors and offsets for QEMU to mmap. QEMU mmaps the > file pages into the shared memory region seen by the guest driver. > > Maybe an equivalent mechanism is needed for virtio-gpu so a device > resource file descriptor can be passed to QEMU and then mmapped so the > guest driver can see the pages? > > I think it's possible to unify the virtiofs and virtio-gpu extensions to > the vhost-user protocol. Two new slave channel messages are needed: "map > <fd, offset, len> to shared memory resource <n>" and "unmap <offset, > len> from shared memory resource <n>". Both devices could use these > messages to implement their respective DAX Window and Blob Resource > functionality. It might be possible; but there's a bunch of lifetime/alignment/etc questions to be answered. For virtiofs DAX we carve out a chunk of a BAR as a 'cache' (unfortunate name) that we can then do mappings into. The VHOST_USER_SLAVE_FS_MAP/UNMAP commands can do the mapping: https://gitlab.com/virtio-fs/qemu/-/commit/7c29854da484afd7ca95acbd2e4acfc2c75ef491 https://gitlab.com/virtio-fs/qemu/-/commit/f32bc2524035931856aa218ce18efa029b9eed02 those might do what you want if you can figure out a way to generalise the bar to map them into. There are some problems; KVM gets really really upset if you try and access an area that doesn't have a mapping or is mapped to a truncated file; do you want the guest to be able to crash like that? Dave > > > > So if we wanted to push forward with getting making Wayland over > > virttio-gpu less crosvm specific, I suppose the first step would be to > > figure out with the crosvm developers what functionality is missing in > > the vhost-user-gpu protocol. That would then make it possible to use > > crosvm's device (with the Wayland support) with other VMMs like QEMU. > > > > (CCing my colleage Puck, who has also been working with me on getting > > Wayland over virtio-gpu up and running outside of Chrome OS.) > > I have CCed David Gilbert (virtiofs DAX Window) and Gurchetan Singh > (virtio-gpu shared memory region). > > Stefan -- Dr. David Alan Gilbert / dgilbert@redhat.com / Manchester, UK
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