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Dong Jia Shi25627ba2017-03-17 04:17:41 +01001vfio-ccw: the basic infrastructure
2==================================
3
4Introduction
5------------
6
7Here we describe the vfio support for I/O subchannel devices for
8Linux/s390. Motivation for vfio-ccw is to passthrough subchannels to a
9virtual machine, while vfio is the means.
10
11Different than other hardware architectures, s390 has defined a unified
12I/O access method, which is so called Channel I/O. It has its own access
13patterns:
14- Channel programs run asynchronously on a separate (co)processor.
15- The channel subsystem will access any memory designated by the caller
16 in the channel program directly, i.e. there is no iommu involved.
17Thus when we introduce vfio support for these devices, we realize it
18with a mediated device (mdev) implementation. The vfio mdev will be
19added to an iommu group, so as to make itself able to be managed by the
20vfio framework. And we add read/write callbacks for special vfio I/O
21regions to pass the channel programs from the mdev to its parent device
22(the real I/O subchannel device) to do further address translation and
23to perform I/O instructions.
24
25This document does not intend to explain the s390 I/O architecture in
26every detail. More information/reference could be found here:
27- A good start to know Channel I/O in general:
28 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channel_I/O
29- s390 architecture:
30 s390 Principles of Operation manual (IBM Form. No. SA22-7832)
31- The existing Qemu code which implements a simple emulated channel
32 subsystem could also be a good reference. It makes it easier to follow
33 the flow.
34 qemu/hw/s390x/css.c
35
36For vfio mediated device framework:
37- Documentation/vfio-mediated-device.txt
38
39Motivation of vfio-ccw
40----------------------
41
42Currently, a guest virtualized via qemu/kvm on s390 only sees
43paravirtualized virtio devices via the "Virtio Over Channel I/O
44(virtio-ccw)" transport. This makes virtio devices discoverable via
45standard operating system algorithms for handling channel devices.
46
47However this is not enough. On s390 for the majority of devices, which
48use the standard Channel I/O based mechanism, we also need to provide
49the functionality of passing through them to a Qemu virtual machine.
50This includes devices that don't have a virtio counterpart (e.g. tape
51drives) or that have specific characteristics which guests want to
52exploit.
53
54For passing a device to a guest, we want to use the same interface as
55everybody else, namely vfio. Thus, we would like to introduce vfio
56support for channel devices. And we would like to name this new vfio
57device "vfio-ccw".
58
59Access patterns of CCW devices
60------------------------------
61
62s390 architecture has implemented a so called channel subsystem, that
63provides a unified view of the devices physically attached to the
64systems. Though the s390 hardware platform knows about a huge variety of
65different peripheral attachments like disk devices (aka. DASDs), tapes,
66communication controllers, etc. They can all be accessed by a well
67defined access method and they are presenting I/O completion a unified
68way: I/O interruptions.
69
70All I/O requires the use of channel command words (CCWs). A CCW is an
71instruction to a specialized I/O channel processor. A channel program is
72a sequence of CCWs which are executed by the I/O channel subsystem. To
73issue a channel program to the channel subsystem, it is required to
74build an operation request block (ORB), which can be used to point out
75the format of the CCW and other control information to the system. The
76operating system signals the I/O channel subsystem to begin executing
77the channel program with a SSCH (start sub-channel) instruction. The
78central processor is then free to proceed with non-I/O instructions
79until interrupted. The I/O completion result is received by the
80interrupt handler in the form of interrupt response block (IRB).
81
82Back to vfio-ccw, in short:
83- ORBs and channel programs are built in guest kernel (with guest
84 physical addresses).
85- ORBs and channel programs are passed to the host kernel.
86- Host kernel translates the guest physical addresses to real addresses
87 and starts the I/O with issuing a privileged Channel I/O instruction
88 (e.g SSCH).
89- channel programs run asynchronously on a separate processor.
90- I/O completion will be signaled to the host with I/O interruptions.
91 And it will be copied as IRB to user space to pass it back to the
92 guest.
93
94Physical vfio ccw device and its child mdev
95-------------------------------------------
96
97As mentioned above, we realize vfio-ccw with a mdev implementation.
98
99Channel I/O does not have IOMMU hardware support, so the physical
100vfio-ccw device does not have an IOMMU level translation or isolation.
101
102Sub-channel I/O instructions are all privileged instructions, When
103handling the I/O instruction interception, vfio-ccw has the software
104policing and translation how the channel program is programmed before
105it gets sent to hardware.
106
107Within this implementation, we have two drivers for two types of
108devices:
109- The vfio_ccw driver for the physical subchannel device.
110 This is an I/O subchannel driver for the real subchannel device. It
111 realizes a group of callbacks and registers to the mdev framework as a
112 parent (physical) device. As a consequence, mdev provides vfio_ccw a
113 generic interface (sysfs) to create mdev devices. A vfio mdev could be
114 created by vfio_ccw then and added to the mediated bus. It is the vfio
115 device that added to an IOMMU group and a vfio group.
116 vfio_ccw also provides an I/O region to accept channel program
117 request from user space and store I/O interrupt result for user
118 space to retrieve. To notify user space an I/O completion, it offers
119 an interface to setup an eventfd fd for asynchronous signaling.
120
121- The vfio_mdev driver for the mediated vfio ccw device.
122 This is provided by the mdev framework. It is a vfio device driver for
123 the mdev that created by vfio_ccw.
124 It realize a group of vfio device driver callbacks, adds itself to a
125 vfio group, and registers itself to the mdev framework as a mdev
126 driver.
127 It uses a vfio iommu backend that uses the existing map and unmap
128 ioctls, but rather than programming them into an IOMMU for a device,
129 it simply stores the translations for use by later requests. This
130 means that a device programmed in a VM with guest physical addresses
131 can have the vfio kernel convert that address to process virtual
132 address, pin the page and program the hardware with the host physical
133 address in one step.
134 For a mdev, the vfio iommu backend will not pin the pages during the
135 VFIO_IOMMU_MAP_DMA ioctl. Mdev framework will only maintain a database
136 of the iova<->vaddr mappings in this operation. And they export a
137 vfio_pin_pages and a vfio_unpin_pages interfaces from the vfio iommu
138 backend for the physical devices to pin and unpin pages by demand.
139
140Below is a high Level block diagram.
141
142 +-------------+
143 | |
144 | +---------+ | mdev_register_driver() +--------------+
145 | | Mdev | +<-----------------------+ |
146 | | bus | | | vfio_mdev.ko |
147 | | driver | +----------------------->+ |<-> VFIO user
148 | +---------+ | probe()/remove() +--------------+ APIs
149 | |
150 | MDEV CORE |
151 | MODULE |
152 | mdev.ko |
153 | +---------+ | mdev_register_device() +--------------+
154 | |Physical | +<-----------------------+ |
155 | | device | | | vfio_ccw.ko |<-> subchannel
156 | |interface| +----------------------->+ | device
157 | +---------+ | callback +--------------+
158 +-------------+
159
160The process of how these work together.
1611. vfio_ccw.ko drives the physical I/O subchannel, and registers the
162 physical device (with callbacks) to mdev framework.
163 When vfio_ccw probing the subchannel device, it registers device
164 pointer and callbacks to the mdev framework. Mdev related file nodes
165 under the device node in sysfs would be created for the subchannel
166 device, namely 'mdev_create', 'mdev_destroy' and
167 'mdev_supported_types'.
1682. Create a mediated vfio ccw device.
169 Use the 'mdev_create' sysfs file, we need to manually create one (and
170 only one for our case) mediated device.
1713. vfio_mdev.ko drives the mediated ccw device.
172 vfio_mdev is also the vfio device drvier. It will probe the mdev and
173 add it to an iommu_group and a vfio_group. Then we could pass through
174 the mdev to a guest.
175
176vfio-ccw I/O region
177-------------------
178
179An I/O region is used to accept channel program request from user
180space and store I/O interrupt result for user space to retrieve. The
181defination of the region is:
182
183struct ccw_io_region {
184#define ORB_AREA_SIZE 12
185 __u8 orb_area[ORB_AREA_SIZE];
186#define SCSW_AREA_SIZE 12
187 __u8 scsw_area[SCSW_AREA_SIZE];
188#define IRB_AREA_SIZE 96
189 __u8 irb_area[IRB_AREA_SIZE];
190 __u32 ret_code;
191} __packed;
192
193While starting an I/O request, orb_area should be filled with the
194guest ORB, and scsw_area should be filled with the SCSW of the Virtual
195Subchannel.
196
197irb_area stores the I/O result.
198
199ret_code stores a return code for each access of the region.
200
201vfio-ccw patches overview
202-------------------------
203
204For now, our patches are rebased on the latest mdev implementation.
205vfio-ccw follows what vfio-pci did on the s390 paltform and uses
206vfio-iommu-type1 as the vfio iommu backend. It's a good start to launch
207the code review for vfio-ccw. Note that the implementation is far from
208complete yet; but we'd like to get feedback for the general
209architecture.
210
211* CCW translation APIs
212- Description:
213 These introduce a group of APIs (start with 'cp_') to do CCW
214 translation. The CCWs passed in by a user space program are
215 organized with their guest physical memory addresses. These APIs
216 will copy the CCWs into the kernel space, and assemble a runnable
217 kernel channel program by updating the guest physical addresses with
218 their corresponding host physical addresses.
219- Patches:
220 vfio: ccw: introduce channel program interfaces
221
222* vfio_ccw device driver
223- Description:
224 The following patches utilizes the CCW translation APIs and introduce
225 vfio_ccw, which is the driver for the I/O subchannel devices you want
226 to pass through.
227 vfio_ccw implements the following vfio ioctls:
228 VFIO_DEVICE_GET_INFO
229 VFIO_DEVICE_GET_IRQ_INFO
230 VFIO_DEVICE_GET_REGION_INFO
231 VFIO_DEVICE_RESET
232 VFIO_DEVICE_SET_IRQS
233 This provides an I/O region, so that the user space program can pass a
234 channel program to the kernel, to do further CCW translation before
235 issuing them to a real device.
236 This also provides the SET_IRQ ioctl to setup an event notifier to
237 notify the user space program the I/O completion in an asynchronous
238 way.
239- Patches:
240 vfio: ccw: basic implementation for vfio_ccw driver
241 vfio: ccw: introduce ccw_io_region
242 vfio: ccw: realize VFIO_DEVICE_GET_REGION_INFO ioctl
243 vfio: ccw: realize VFIO_DEVICE_RESET ioctl
244 vfio: ccw: realize VFIO_DEVICE_G(S)ET_IRQ_INFO ioctls
245
246The user of vfio-ccw is not limited to Qemu, while Qemu is definitely a
247good example to get understand how these patches work. Here is a little
248bit more detail how an I/O request triggered by the Qemu guest will be
249handled (without error handling).
250
251Explanation:
252Q1-Q7: Qemu side process.
253K1-K5: Kernel side process.
254
255Q1. Get I/O region info during initialization.
256Q2. Setup event notifier and handler to handle I/O completion.
257
258... ...
259
260Q3. Intercept a ssch instruction.
261Q4. Write the guest channel program and ORB to the I/O region.
262 K1. Copy from guest to kernel.
263 K2. Translate the guest channel program to a host kernel space
264 channel program, which becomes runnable for a real device.
265 K3. With the necessary information contained in the orb passed in
266 by Qemu, issue the ccwchain to the device.
267 K4. Return the ssch CC code.
268Q5. Return the CC code to the guest.
269
270... ...
271
272 K5. Interrupt handler gets the I/O result and write the result to
273 the I/O region.
274 K6. Signal Qemu to retrieve the result.
275Q6. Get the signal and event handler reads out the result from the I/O
276 region.
277Q7. Update the irb for the guest.
278
279Limitations
280-----------
281
282The current vfio-ccw implementation focuses on supporting basic commands
283needed to implement block device functionality (read/write) of DASD/ECKD
284device only. Some commands may need special handling in the future, for
285example, anything related to path grouping.
286
287DASD is a kind of storage device. While ECKD is a data recording format.
288More information for DASD and ECKD could be found here:
289https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct-access_storage_device
290https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Count_key_data
291
292Together with the corresponding work in Qemu, we can bring the passed
293through DASD/ECKD device online in a guest now and use it as a block
294device.
295
296Reference
297---------
2981. ESA/s390 Principles of Operation manual (IBM Form. No. SA22-7832)
2992. ESA/390 Common I/O Device Commands manual (IBM Form. No. SA22-7204)
3003. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channel_I/O
3014. Documentation/s390/cds.txt
3025. Documentation/vfio.txt
3036. Documentation/vfio-mediated-device.txt