Hi Alex,
Still have a direction question with you. Better get agreement with you
before heading forward.

> From: Alex Williamson <alex.william...@redhat.com>
> Sent: Friday, April 3, 2020 11:35 PM
[...]
> > > > + *
> > > > + * returns: 0 on success, -errno on failure.
> > > > + */
> > > > +struct vfio_iommu_type1_cache_invalidate {
> > > > +       __u32   argsz;
> > > > +       __u32   flags;
> > > > +       struct  iommu_cache_invalidate_info cache_info;
> > > > +};
> > > > +#define VFIO_IOMMU_CACHE_INVALIDATE      _IO(VFIO_TYPE,
> VFIO_BASE
> > > + 24)
> > >
> > > The future extension capabilities of this ioctl worry me, I wonder if
> > > we should do another data[] with flag defining that data as CACHE_INFO.
> >
> > Can you elaborate? Does it mean with this way we don't rely on iommu
> > driver to provide version_to_size conversion and instead we just pass
> > data[] to iommu driver for further audit?
> 
> No, my concern is that this ioctl has a single function, strictly tied
> to the iommu uapi.  If we replace cache_info with data[] then we can
> define a flag to specify that data[] is struct
> iommu_cache_invalidate_info, and if we need to, a different flag to
> identify data[] as something else.  For example if we get stuck
> expanding cache_info to meet new demands and develop a new uapi to
> solve that, how would we expand this ioctl to support it rather than
> also create a new ioctl?  There's also a trade-off in making the ioctl
> usage more difficult for the user.  I'd still expect the vfio layer to
> check the flag and interpret data[] as indicated by the flag rather
> than just passing a blob of opaque data to the iommu layer though.
> Thanks,

Based on your comments about defining a single ioctl and a unified
vfio structure (with a @data[] field) for pasid_alloc/free, bind/
unbind_gpasid, cache_inv. After some offline trying, I think it would
be good for bind/unbind_gpasid and cache_inv as both of them use the
iommu uapi definition. While the pasid alloc/free operation doesn't.
It would be weird to put all of them together. So pasid alloc/free
may have a separate ioctl. It would look as below. Does this direction
look good per your opinion?

ioctl #22: VFIO_IOMMU_PASID_REQUEST
/**
  * @pasid: used to return the pasid alloc result when flags == ALLOC_PASID
  *         specify a pasid to be freed when flags == FREE_PASID
  * @range: specify the allocation range when flags == ALLOC_PASID
  */
struct vfio_iommu_pasid_request {
        __u32   argsz;
#define VFIO_IOMMU_ALLOC_PASID  (1 << 0)
#define VFIO_IOMMU_FREE_PASID   (1 << 1)
        __u32   flags;
        __u32   pasid;
        struct {
                __u32   min;
                __u32   max;
        } range;
};

ioctl #23: VFIO_IOMMU_NESTING_OP
struct vfio_iommu_type1_nesting_op {
        __u32   argsz;
        __u32   flags;
        __u32   op;
        __u8    data[];
};

/* Nesting Ops */
#define VFIO_IOMMU_NESTING_OP_BIND_PGTBL        0
#define VFIO_IOMMU_NESTING_OP_UNBIND_PGTBL      1
#define VFIO_IOMMU_NESTING_OP_CACHE_INVLD       2
 
Thanks,
Yi Liu
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