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Subject: Re: [PATCH v5 1/7] Introduce device group


On Wed, Apr 27, 2022 at 01:58:18AM +0300, Max Gurtovoy wrote:
> Each device group has a type. For now, define initial type of device
> groups: Type 1 - A virtio PCI SR-IOV physical function (PF) and its PCI
> SR-IOV virtual functions (VFs). This group may contain one or more
> virtio devices.
> 
> Each device within a device group has a unique identifier. This
> identifier is the virtio device id (vdev_id).
> 
> Reviewed-by: Parav Pandit <parav@nvidia.com>
> Signed-off-by: Max Gurtovoy <mgurtovoy@nvidia.com>
> ---
>  introduction.tex | 12 ++++++++++++
>  1 file changed, 12 insertions(+)
> 
> diff --git a/introduction.tex b/introduction.tex
> index 4dc7085..4358ab1 100644
> --- a/introduction.tex
> +++ b/introduction.tex
> @@ -155,6 +155,18 @@ \subsection{Transition from earlier specification drafts}\label{sec:Transition f
>  sections tagged "Legacy Interface" in the section title.
>  These highlight the changes made since the earlier drafts.
>  
> +\subsection{Device group}\label{sec:Introduction / Terminology / Device group}
> +
> +A device group includes one or more virtio devices.
> +Each virtio device has a unique virtio device id (vdev_id) within a device group. A valid vdev_id is a 64-bit field in the range of
> +0x0 - 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF0. Vdev_id 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF is a value that refers to all devices in a device group and isn't a valid vdev_id.
> +
> +For now, the supported device groups are:
> +\begin{enumerate}
> +\item Type 1 - A virtio PCI SR-IOV physical function (PF) and its PCI SR-IOV virtual functions (VFs). For this group type, the PF device has vdev_id that is equal to 0
> +and the VF devices have vdev_id's that are equal to their vf_number (according to the PCI SR-IOV specification).
> +\end{enumerate}
> +
>  \section{Structure Specifications}\label{sec:Structure Specifications}


In context of virtualization type 1 already refers to a specific type
of hypervisor.

I suggest simply "SR-IOV type" - this way users do not need to remember
special terminology.

>  Many device and driver in-memory structure layouts are documented using
> -- 
> 2.21.0



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