On 2024/09/11 22:53, Matthew Rosato wrote:
On 9/11/24 6:58 AM, Akihiko Odaki wrote:
On 2024/09/11 18:38, Cédric Le Goater wrote:
+Matthew +Eric
Side note for the maintainers :
Before this change, the igb device, which is multifunction, was working
fine under Linux.
Was there a fix in Linux since :
57da367b9ec4 ("s390x/pci: forbid multifunction pci device")
6069bcdeacee ("s390x/pci: Move some hotplug checks to the pre_plug handler")
?
The timing of those particular commits predates the linux s390 kernel support
of multifunction/SR-IOV. At that time it was simply not possible on s390.
Is it OK to remove this check of multifunction now?
This code is not working properly with SR-IOV and misleading. It is
better to remove the code if it does no good.
It would be nice if anyone confirms multifunction works for s390x with
the code removed.
s390 PCI devices do not have extended capabilities, so the igb device
does not expose the SRIOV capability and only the PF is accessible but
it doesn't seem to be an issue. (Btw, CONFIG_PCI_IOV is set to y in the
default Linux config which is unexpected)
The linux config option makes sense because the s390 kernel now supports
SR-IOV/multifunction.
Doesn't s390x really see extended capabilities? hw/s390x/s390-pci-inst.c has a
call pci_config_size() and pci_host_config_write_common(), which means it is
exposing the whole PCI Express configuration space. Why can't s390x use
extended capabilities then?
So, rather than poking around in config space, s390 (and thus the s390 kernel)
has an extra layer of 'capabilities' that it generally relies on to determine
device functionality called 'CLP'. Basically, there are pieces of CLP that are
not currently generated (or forwarded from the host in the case of passthrough)
by QEMU that would be needed by the guest to recognize the SRIOV/multifunction
capability of a device, despite what config space has in it. I suspect this is
exactly why only the PF was available to your igb device then (missing CLP info
made the device appear to not have multifunction capability as far as the s390
guest is concerned - fwiw adding CLP emulation to enable that is on our todo
list).
What is expected to happen if you poke the configuration space anyway? I
also wonder if there is some public documentation of CLP and relevant
aspect of PCI support in s390x.
Sounds like the short-term solution here would be to continue allowing the PF
without multifunction being visible to the guest (so as to not regress prior
functionality) and then aim for proper support after with the necessary CLP
pieces.
I agree; we can keep the PF working.
Regards,
Akihiko Odaki