Hi Igor, On 6/11/25 10:45 AM, Igor Mammedov wrote: > On Wed, 11 Jun 2025 08:53:28 +0200 > Eric Auger <eric.au...@redhat.com> wrote: > >> Hi Gustavo, Alex, >> >> On 5/28/25 12:33 PM, Igor Mammedov wrote: >>> On Tue, 27 May 2025 15:54:15 +0200 >>> Eric Auger <eric.au...@redhat.com> wrote: >>> >>>> Hi Igor, >>>> >>>> On 5/27/25 1:58 PM, Igor Mammedov wrote: >>>>> On Tue, 27 May 2025 09:40:04 +0200 >>>>> Eric Auger <eric.au...@redhat.com> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> acpi_pcihp VirtMachineClass state flag will allow >>>>>> to opt in for acpi pci hotplug. This is guarded by a >>>>>> class no_acpi_pcihp flag to manage compats (<= 10.0 >>>>>> machine types will not support ACPI PCI hotplug). >>>>> there is no reason to put an effort in force disabling it >>>>> on old machines, as long as code works when explicitly >>>>> enabled property on CLI. >>>>> >>>>> See comment below on how to deal with it >>>>> >>>>>> Machine state acpi_pcihp flag must be set before the creation >>>>>> of the GED device which will use it. >>>>>> >>>>>> Currently the ACPI PCI HP is turned off by default. This will >>>>>> change later on for 10.1 machine type. >>>>> one thing to note, is that turning it on by default might >>>>> cause change of NIC naming in guest as this brings in >>>>> new "_Sxx" slot naming. /so configs tied to nic go down the drain/ >>>>> >>>>> Naming, we have, also happens to be broken wrt spec >>>>> (it should be unique system wide, there was a gitlab issue for that, >>>>> there is no easy fix that though) >>>>> >>>>> So I'd leave it disabled by default and let users to turn >>>>> it on explicitly when needed. >>>> what is the status on q35, isn't it enabled by default? If so why >>>> wouldn't we want the same setting on ARM? Is that because of the known >>>> issue you report above? >>> Above issue is not a blocker (for thae lack of a good way to fix it) >>> >>> on q35 we have had a few complains and fixes, after pcihp was promoted >>> to default (so hopefully that won't happen on with ARM). Also given >>> that ARM VM is less popular like hood breaking someone setup is even less. >>> >>> That said I'd be cautions keep native hotplug as default, >>> and only ones who need ACPI one, could turn it on explicitly. >>> >>> But well it's policies, so it's up to you ARM folks to decide what >>> virt board should look like. >> What is your preference? Do you prefer enabling ACPI PCI HP by default >> or the opposite. > I'd prefer native PCIe hotplug being default, > that way we have less chance of causing regressions not to mention > less complexity (as acpi pcihp adds up quite a bit of it). > > And ones who want/need acpi-pcihp/acpi-index can enable it explicitly, > to play with.
OK I will follow your suggestion. You have definitively more expertise than me here ! ;-) Thanks! Eric > >> Anybody else? >> >> On my end I think I would prefer to have the same default setting than >> on x86 (ie. ACPI PCI hotplug set by default) but I have no strong >> opinion either. >> >> Thanks >> >> Eric >>> >>>> The no_foo compat stuff was especially introduced to avoid breaking the >>>> guest ABI for old machine types (like the NIC naming alternation you >>>> evoke). >>> no_foo is just another way to handle compat stuff, >>> and when it's more than one knob per feature it gets ugly really fast. >>> Hence, I'd prefer pcihp done in x86 way aka: >>> hw_compat_OLD(ged.use_acpi_hotplug_bridge, false|true) >>> to manage presence of ACPI hotplug on desired machine version. >>> Side benefit it's consistent with how pcihp works on x86 >>> >>>>> >>>>>> We also introduce properties to allow disabling it. >>>>>> >>>>>> Signed-off-by: Eric Auger <eric.au...@redhat.com> >>>>>> Reviewed-by: Gustavo Romero <gustavo.rom...@linaro.org> >>>>>> --- >>>>>> include/hw/arm/virt.h | 2 ++ >>>>>> hw/arm/virt.c | 27 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >>>>>> 2 files changed, 29 insertions(+) >>>>>> >>>>>> diff --git a/include/hw/arm/virt.h b/include/hw/arm/virt.h >>>>>> index 9a1b0f53d2..10ea581f06 100644 >>>>>> --- a/include/hw/arm/virt.h >>>>>> +++ b/include/hw/arm/virt.h >>>>>> @@ -129,6 +129,7 @@ struct VirtMachineClass { >>>>>> bool no_tcg_lpa2; >>>>>> bool no_ns_el2_virt_timer_irq; >>>>>> bool no_nested_smmu; >>>>>> + bool no_acpi_pcihp; >>>>>> }; >>>>>> >>>>>> struct VirtMachineState { >>>>>> @@ -150,6 +151,7 @@ struct VirtMachineState { >>>>>> bool mte; >>>>>> bool dtb_randomness; >>>>>> bool second_ns_uart_present; >>>>>> + bool acpi_pcihp; >>>>>> OnOffAuto acpi; >>>>>> VirtGICType gic_version; >>>>>> VirtIOMMUType iommu; >>>>>> diff --git a/hw/arm/virt.c b/hw/arm/virt.c >>>>>> index 9a6cd085a3..a0deeaf2b3 100644 >>>>>> --- a/hw/arm/virt.c >>>>>> +++ b/hw/arm/virt.c >>>>>> @@ -2397,8 +2397,10 @@ static void machvirt_init(MachineState *machine) >>>>>> create_pcie(vms); >>>>>> >>>>>> if (has_ged && aarch64 && firmware_loaded && >>>>>> virt_is_acpi_enabled(vms)) { >>>>>> + vms->acpi_pcihp &= !vmc->no_acpi_pcihp; >>>>> I don't particularly like no_foo naming as it makes code harder to read >>>>> and combined with 'duplicated' field in machine state it make even things >>>>> worse. >>>>> (if I recall right Philippe was cleaning mess similar flags usage >>>>> have introduced with ITS) >>>>> >>>>> instead of adding machine property (both class and state), >>>>> I'd suggest adding the only property to GPE device (akin to what we have >>>>> in x86 world) >>>>> And then one can meddle with defaults using hw_compat_xxx >>>> no_foo still is a largely used pattern in arm virt: no_ged, >>>> kvm_no_adjvtime, no_kvm_steal_time, no_tcg_lpa2, ../.. There are plenty >>>> of them and I am not under the impression this is going to be changed. >>>> >>>> If you refer to 8d23b1df7212 ("hw/arm/virt: Remove >>>> VirtMachineClass::no_its field") I think the no_its was removed because >>>> the machine it applied was removed. >>>> >>>> If I understand correctly you would like the prop to be attached to the >>>> GED device. However the GED device is internally created by the virt >>>> machine code and not passed through a "-device" CLI option. So how would >>>> you pass the option on the cmd line if you don't want it to be set by >>>> default per machine type? >>>> >>>> Thanks >>>> >>>> Eric >>>>> >>>>>> vms->acpi_dev = create_acpi_ged(vms); >>>>>> } else { >>>>>> + vms->acpi_pcihp = false; >>>>>> create_gpio_devices(vms, VIRT_GPIO, sysmem); >>>>>> } >>>>>> >>>>>> @@ -2593,6 +2595,20 @@ static void virt_set_its(Object *obj, bool value, >>>>>> Error **errp) >>>>>> vms->its = value; >>>>>> } >>>>>> >>>>>> +static bool virt_get_acpi_pcihp(Object *obj, Error **errp) >>>>>> +{ >>>>>> + VirtMachineState *vms = VIRT_MACHINE(obj); >>>>>> + >>>>>> + return vms->acpi_pcihp; >>>>>> +} >>>>>> + >>>>>> +static void virt_set_acpi_pcihp(Object *obj, bool value, Error **errp) >>>>>> +{ >>>>>> + VirtMachineState *vms = VIRT_MACHINE(obj); >>>>>> + >>>>>> + vms->acpi_pcihp = value; >>>>>> +} >>>>>> + >>>>>> static bool virt_get_dtb_randomness(Object *obj, Error **errp) >>>>>> { >>>>>> VirtMachineState *vms = VIRT_MACHINE(obj); >>>>>> @@ -3310,6 +3326,10 @@ static void virt_machine_class_init(ObjectClass >>>>>> *oc, const void *data) >>>>>> "in ACPI table header." >>>>>> "The string may be up to 8 >>>>>> bytes in size"); >>>>>> >>>>>> + object_class_property_add_bool(oc, "acpi-pcihp", >>>>>> + virt_get_acpi_pcihp, >>>>>> virt_set_acpi_pcihp); >>>>>> + object_class_property_set_description(oc, "acpi-pcihp", >>>>>> + "Force ACPI PCI hotplug"); >>>>>> } >>>>>> >>>>>> static void virt_instance_init(Object *obj) >>>>>> @@ -3344,6 +3364,9 @@ static void virt_instance_init(Object *obj) >>>>>> vms->tcg_its = true; >>>>>> } >>>>>> >>>>>> + /* default disallows ACPI PCI hotplug */ >>>>>> + vms->acpi_pcihp = false; >>>>>> + >>>>>> /* Default disallows iommu instantiation */ >>>>>> vms->iommu = VIRT_IOMMU_NONE; >>>>>> >>>>>> @@ -3394,8 +3417,12 @@ DEFINE_VIRT_MACHINE_AS_LATEST(10, 1) >>>>>> >>>>>> static void virt_machine_10_0_options(MachineClass *mc) >>>>>> { >>>>>> + VirtMachineClass *vmc = VIRT_MACHINE_CLASS(OBJECT_CLASS(mc)); >>>>>> + >>>>>> virt_machine_10_1_options(mc); >>>>>> compat_props_add(mc->compat_props, hw_compat_10_0, >>>>>> hw_compat_10_0_len); >>>>>> + /* 10.0 and earlier do not support ACPI PCI hotplug */ >>>>>> + vmc->no_acpi_pcihp = true; >>>>>> } >>>>>> DEFINE_VIRT_MACHINE(10, 0) >>>>>>