18.12.24 12:05, Julien Grall:
On 18/12/2024 09:52, Sergiy Kibrik wrote:
hi Julien,
17.12.24 14:42, Julien Grall:
Hi,
Can you clarify why this is an RFC?
The code for LATE_HWDOM support on ARM seems to be already in place
and working, yet I'm not sure that such configuration is ready to be
exposed for users (well, probably not ready yet, considering Daniel's
comments regarding XSM later in this thread).
Thanks. In the future, for RFCs, I would suggest to add a section after
your commit message (generally after ---) to describe a bit more what
you input you expect from the reviewers.
yes, sure
On 17/12/2024 11:47, Sergiy Kibrik wrote:
Allow to build ARM configuration with support for initializing
hardware domain.
On ARM it is only possible to start hardware domain in multiboot
mode, so
dom0less support is required. This is reflected by dependency on
DOM0LESS_BOOT
instead of directly depending on ARM config option.
I am a bit confused with the explanation. We already have an hardware
domain on Arm. It is dom0. So what are you trying to achieve? Is this
remove some permissions from the hardware domain?
I agree, it should have better description.
This is to split dom0 permissions into control-only and hardware-only
domains, much like it can be done in x86.
I don't believe you need the late_hwdom feature to do that on Arm. In
the case of dom0less, you are creating the domains at boot, so at the
point you can decide who does what.
I'm not sure which mechanism to use for this. Can it be done by XSM
policy management?
If so, why can't the hardware domain stay as dom0 and you remove the
feature you don't want (e.g. control domain)?
control domain is still needed, but as a separate instance & without
hardware access.
Sure. But the control domain doesn't need to be dom0, it could be dom1,
right?
I suppose it can. But again -- how do I make dom1 (or any other) a
control domain instead of dom0?
Are you sure this patch is sufficient to use the late hwdom feature?
Looking at the code, to enable the late hwdom, the user needs to
provide a domid on the command line. But AFAICT, there is no way to
provide a domain ID in the DOM0LESS case...
I append "hardware_dom=1" to xen,xen-bootargs in host's device tree
and it works.
AFAIU, the domain needs to be explicitely created. How do you do that?
Is it just describing the domain in the DT? If so, how does it work if
there are multiple domain described in the DT?
Indeed, in my case it works only because there's single domain
description in DT.
If there're many domains in DT, we can't be sure which domain ID each of
them would receive at boot, right?
-Sergiy