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Subject: [PATCH v10 04/10] admin: introduce virtio admin virtqueues


The admin virtqueues will be the first interface to issue admin commands.

Currently virtio specification defines control virtqueue to manipulate
features and configuration of the device it operates on. However,
control virtqueue commands are device type specific, which makes it very
difficult to extend for device agnostic commands.

To support this requirement in a more generic way, this patch introduces
a new admin virtqueue interface.

We also support more than one admin virtqueue, for QoS and
scalability requirements.

Signed-off-by: Max Gurtovoy <mgurtovoy@nvidia.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
---
 admin.tex   | 73 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 content.tex |  7 +++--
 2 files changed, 78 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/admin.tex b/admin.tex
index 46240f8..3026a79 100644
--- a/admin.tex
+++ b/admin.tex
@@ -148,3 +148,76 @@ \subsection{Group administration commands}\label{sec:Basic Facilities of a Virti
 0x05-0xFFFF   & -    & reserved for future use \\
 \hline
 \end{tabular}
+
+\section{Administration Virtqueues}\label{sec:Basic Facilities of a Virtio Device / Administration Virtqueues}
+
+An administration virtqueue of an owner device is used to submit
+group administration commands. An owner device can have more
+than one administration virtqueue.
+
+If VIRTIO_F_ADMIN_VQ has been negotiated, an owner device exposes one
+or more adminstration virtqueues. The number and locations of the
+administration virtqueues are exposed by the owner device in a transport
+specific manner.
+
+The driver submits commands by queueing them to an arbitrary
+administration virtqueue, and they are processed by the
+device in the order in which they are queued. It is the
+responsibility of the driver to ensure ordering for commands
+placed on different administration virtqueues, because they will
+be executed with no order constraints.
+
+Administration virtqueues are used as follows:
+\begin{itemize}
+\item The driver submits the command using the \field{struct virtio_admin_cmd}
+structure using a buffer consisting of two parts: a device-readable one followed by a
+device-writable one.
+\item the device-readable part includes fields from \field{opcode}
+through \field{command_specific_data}.
+\item the device-writeable buffer includes fields from \field{status}
+through \field{command_specific_result} inclusive.
+\end{itemize}
+
+For each command, this specification describes a distinct
+format structure used for \field{command_specific_data} and
+\field{command_specific_result}, the length of these fields
+depends on the command.
+
+However, to ensure forward compatibility
+\begin{itemize}
+\item drivers are allowed to submit buffers that are longer
+than what the device expects
+(that is, longer than the length of
+\field{opcode} through \field{command_specific_data}).
+This allows the driver to maintain
+a single format structure even if some structure fields are
+unused by the device.
+\item drivers are allowed to submit buffers that are shorter
+than what the device expects
+(that is, shorter than the length of \field{status} through
+\field{command_specific_result}). This allows the device to maintain
+a single format structure even if some structure fields are
+unused by the driver.
+\end{itemize}
+
+The device compares the length of each part (device-readable and
+device-writeable) of the buffer as submitted by driver to what it
+expects and then silently truncates the structures to either the
+length submitted by the driver, or the length described in this
+specification, whichever is shorter.  The device silently ignores
+any data falling outside the shorter of the two lengths. Any
+missing fields are interpreted as set to zero.
+
+Similarly, the driver compares the used buffer length
+of the buffer to what it expects and then silently
+truncates the structure to the used buffer length.
+The driver silently ignores any data falling outside
+the used buffer length reported by the device.  Any missing
+fields are interpreted as set to zero.
+
+This simplifies driver and device implementations since the
+driver/device can simply maintain a single large structure (such
+as a C structure) for a command and its result. As new versions
+of the specification are designed, new fields can be added to the
+tail of a structure, with the driver/device using the full
+structure without concern for versioning.
diff --git a/content.tex b/content.tex
index ffe45c4..c8647c9 100644
--- a/content.tex
+++ b/content.tex
@@ -99,10 +99,10 @@ \section{Feature Bits}\label{sec:Basic Facilities of a Virtio Device / Feature B
 \begin{description}
 \item[0 to 23, and 50 to 127] Feature bits for the specific device type
 
-\item[24 to 40] Feature bits reserved for extensions to the queue and
+\item[24 to 41] Feature bits reserved for extensions to the queue and
   feature negotiation mechanisms
 
-\item[41 to 49, and 128 and above] Feature bits reserved for future extensions.
+\item[42 to 49, and 128 and above] Feature bits reserved for future extensions.
 \end{description}
 
 \begin{note}
@@ -7682,6 +7682,9 @@ \chapter{Reserved Feature Bits}\label{sec:Reserved Feature Bits}
   that the driver can reset a queue individually.
   See \ref{sec:Basic Facilities of a Virtio Device / Virtqueues / Virtqueue Reset}.
 
+  \item[VIRTIO_F_ADMIN_VQ(41)] This feature indicates that the device exposes one or more
+  administration virtqueues.
+
 \end{description}
 
 \drivernormative{\section}{Reserved Feature Bits}{Reserved Feature Bits}
-- 
MST



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