On 12/1/23 16:21, Markus Armbruster wrote:
Laurent Vivier <lviv...@redhat.com> writes:

On 11/21/23 08:58, Markus Armbruster wrote:
Laurent, there's a question for you at the end.

Yong Huang <yong.hu...@smartx.com> writes:

On Thu, Nov 16, 2023 at 10:44 PM Markus Armbruster <arm...@redhat.com>
wrote:

Hyman Huang <yong.hu...@smartx.com> writes:

This patch allows to display feature and status bits in virtio-status.

An optional argument is introduced: show-bits. For example:
{"execute": "x-query-virtio-status",
   "arguments": {"path": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[1]/virtio-backend",
                 "show-bits": true}

Features and status bits could be helpful for applications to compare
directly. For instance, when an upper application aims to ensure the
virtio negotiation correctness between guest, QEMU, and OVS-DPDK, it use
the "ovs-vsctl list interface" command to retrieve interface features
(in number format) and the QMP command x-query-virtio-status to retrieve
vhost-user net device features. If "show-bits" is added, the application
can compare the two features directly; No need to encoding the features
returned by the QMP command.

This patch also serves as a preparation for the next one, which implements
a vhost-user test case about acked features of vhost-user protocol.

Note that since the matching HMP command is typically used for human,
leave it unchanged.

Signed-off-by: Hyman Huang <yong.hu...@smartx.com>

[...]

Double-checking...  @feature-bits provides the exact same information as
@features, only in another encoding.  Correct?


Same for all the other new -bits.  Correct?

Yes, all the new fields are only about providing another encoding.

Why do we want to return the same information in two different
encodings?  I figure the commit message tries to answer this question:

       Features and status bits could be helpful for applications to compare
       directly. For instance, when an upper application aims to ensure the
       virtio negotiation correctness between guest, QEMU, and OVS-DPDK, it use
       the "ovs-vsctl list interface" command to retrieve interface features
       (in number format) and the QMP command x-query-virtio-status to retrieve
       vhost-user net device features. If "show-bits" is added, the application
       can compare the two features directly; No need to encoding the features
       returned by the QMP command.

       This patch also serves as a preparation for the next one, which 
implements
       a vhost-user test case about acked features of vhost-user protocol.

I guess you're trying to simplify use cases where the QMP client wants
to compare entire feature sets without caring for individual features.

The comparison is easy if both sets are represented the same way,
e.g. both are numbers, or both are lists of symbols.

With different representations, we first have to map to a common
representation.  Unfortunately, the design of x-query-virtio-status
makes this harder than it should be.

We use QAPI types VirtioDeviceStatus, VhostDeviceProtocols,
VirtioDeviceFeatures to represent feature sets.  They all work the same
way: array of strings plus a number.  For each bit QEMU knows, there's a
string in the array.  Any remaining bits go into the number.

The format of the string is undocumented.  They look like

      "WELL_KNOWN_SYMBOL: human readable explanation"

Mapping from bit to this string in a client would require duplicating
QEMU's code exactly.

Mapping both bit and string to just "WELL_KNOWN_SYMBOL" could perhaps be
done.

The mapping between symbols and bits is not visible in QMP.  Mapping
from string to bit requires exploiting the undocumented format: extract
the well-known symbol and decode it.

This encoding of feature sets goes back to commit f3034ad71fc (qmp:
decode feature & status bits in virtio-status) v7.2.  Before that, the
command returned the bits as a number.

For example, return value "member "status":

      Before f3034ad71fc:

          "status": 15,

      Since f3034ad71fc:

          "status": {
              "statuses": [
                  "VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_ACKNOWLEDGE: Valid virtio device found",
                  "VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER: Guest OS compatible with device",
                  "VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_FEATURES_OK: Feature negotiation complete",
                  "VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER_OK: Driver setup and ready"
              ]},

      With your patch:

          "status": {
              "statuses": [
                  "VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_ACKNOWLEDGE: Valid virtio device found",
                  "VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER: Guest OS compatible with device",
                  "VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_FEATURES_OK: Feature negotiation complete",
                  "VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER_OK: Driver setup and ready"
              ]},
          "status-bits": 15,

Looks like commit f3034ad71fc improved one use case at the expense of
another, and your patch tries to revert the damage.  Which one exactly
it improved is unclear; the commit message doesn't tell.  Laurent?

[...]


The first idea of the series "hmp,qmp: Add commands to introspect virtio 
devices"
including commit f3034ad71fc was to help developer to debug virtio devices, so 
for this
purpose it was interesting to display the status in a human readable manner.

Of course, if you want to run automatic tests and be able to compare the result 
to have
the status bits result seems to be better.

As these are two different use cases, it's understandable to have two different
representations of the same information.

Thanks!

Both use cases are valid, but I dislike both the existing and the
proposed interface.

We can change it: x-query-virtio-status isn't stable (it's for debugging
and testing).  But even unstable interfaces should only be changed for
good, clear reasons.

I feel the change from "bits encoded as a number" to "bits as list of
descriptive strings plus number for the unknown ones" fell short.  Let
me explain.

The initial version of the command had "bits encoded as number".  Unless
we understand why that was done, we should assume it was done for a
reason.  We now know it was: Hyman Huang posted a patch to get it back.

Instead of "bits as list of descriptive strings plus number for the
unknown ones", we could have done "bits encoded as number, plus list of
descriptive strings", or plus some other human-readable encoding.

QMP output of the form "WELL_KNOWN_SYMBOL: human readable explanation"
smells of encoding structured information in strings, which is a no-no.

Perhaps we could have added human-readable output just in HMP.  That's
what we normally do.

Here are a few possible alternatives to Hyman Huang's patch:

1. Revert commit f3034ad71fc for QMP, keep it for HMP.

2. Replace @unknown-FOO (just the unknown bits) by @FOO-bits (all bits).

3. Add @FOO-bits next to @unknown-FOO, deprecate @unknown-FOO.

4. Create a QAPI enum for the known bits.  Clients can use introspection
    to learn the mapping between symbols and bits.  Requires dumbing down
    the descriptive strings to just the symbols.  This feels
    both overengineered and cumbersome to use.

For 2 and 3, I'd prefer to also dumb down the descriptive strings to
just the symbols.

Thoughts?


I agree with you. As x-CMD are unstable, perhaps we can go directly to 2?
(and of course to remove the descriptive strings. Is it easily possible to keep them for the HMP version?)

Thanks,
Laurent


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