On 08/20/2018 10:23 AM, Cornelia Huck wrote:
On Mon, 13 Aug 2018 17:48:09 -0400
Tony Krowiak <akrow...@linux.vnet.ibm.com> wrote:
From: Tony Krowiak <akrow...@linux.ibm.com>
Provides the sysfs interfaces for:
1. Assigning AP control domains to the mediated matrix device
2. Unassigning AP control domains from a mediated matrix device
3. Displaying the control domains assigned to a mediated matrix
device
The IDs of the AP control domains assigned to the mediated matrix
device are stored in an AP domain mask (ADM). The bits in the ADM,
from most significant to least significant bit, correspond to
AP domain numbers 0 to 255. On some systems, the maximum allowable
domain number may be less than 255 - depending upon the host's
AP configuration - and assignment may be rejected if the input
domain ID exceeds the limit.
Please remind me of the relationship between control domains and usage
domains... IIRC, usage domains allow both requests and configuration,
while control domains allow only configuration, and are by convention a
superset of usage domains.
A usage domain is a domain to which an AP command-request message can be
submitted for processing. A control domain is a domain that can
be changed by an AP command request message submitted to a usage domain.
AP command request messages to configure a domain will contain the domain
number of the domain to be modified. The AP firmware will check the
control domain mask (ADM) and will allow the request to proceed only if
the corresponding bit in the ADM is set.
Is there a hard requirement somewhere in there, or can the admin
cheerfully use different masks for usage domains and control domains
without the SIE choking on it?
There is no hard requirement that control domains must be a superset of
the usage domains, it is merely an architectural convention. AFAIK,
SIE doesn't enforce this and will not break if the convention is not
enforced externally. Having said that, you should note that the AQM
and ADM masks configured for the mediated matrix device will be logically
OR'd together to create the ADM stored in the CRYCB referenced from the
guest's SIE state description. In other words, we are enforcing the
convention in our software.