On 12/25/2013 02:43 AM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: > On Wed, Dec 25, 2013 at 01:15:29AM +1100, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote: >> On 12/24/2013 08:40 PM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: >>> On Tue, Dec 24, 2013 at 02:09:07PM +1100, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote: >>>> On 12/24/2013 03:24 AM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: >>>>> On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 02:01:13AM +1100, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote: >>>>>> On 12/23/2013 01:46 AM, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote: >>>>>>> On 12/22/2013 09:56 PM, Michael S. Tsirkin wrote: >>>>>>>> On Sun, Dec 22, 2013 at 02:01:23AM +1100, Alexey Kardashevskiy wrote: >>>>>>>>> Hi! >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> I am having a problem with virtio-net + vhost on POWER7 machine - it >>>>>>>>> does >>>>>>>>> not survive reboot of the guest. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Steps to reproduce: >>>>>>>>> 1. boot the guest >>>>>>>>> 2. configure eth0 and do ping - everything works >>>>>>>>> 3. reboot the guest (i.e. type "reboot") >>>>>>>>> 4. when it is booted, eth0 can be configured but will not work at all. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> The test is: >>>>>>>>> ifconfig eth0 172.20.1.2 up >>>>>>>>> ping 172.20.1.23 >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> If to run tcpdump on the host's "tap-id3" interface, it shows no >>>>>>>>> trafic >>>>>>>>> coming from the guest. If to compare how it works before and after >>>>>>>>> reboot, >>>>>>>>> I can see the guest doing an ARP request for 172.20.1.23 and receives >>>>>>>>> the >>>>>>>>> response and it does the same after reboot but the answer does not >>>>>>>>> come. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> So you see the arp packet in guest but not in host? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Yes. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>>> One thing to try is to boot debug kernel - where pr_debug is >>>>>>>> enabled - then you might see some errors in the kernel log. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Tried and added lot more debug printk myself, not clear at all what is >>>>>>> happening there. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> One more hint - if I boot the guest and the guest does not bring eth0 up >>>>>>> AND wait more than 200 seconds (and less than 210 seconds), then eth0 >>>>>>> will >>>>>>> not work at all. I.e. this script produces not-working-eth0: >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> ifconfig eth0 172.20.1.2 down >>>>>>> sleep 210 >>>>>>> ifconfig eth0 172.20.1.2 up >>>>>>> ping 172.20.1.23 >>>>>>> >>>>>>> s/210/200/ - and it starts working. No reboot is required to reproduce. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> No "vhost" == always works. The only difference I can see here is >>>>>>> vhost's >>>>>>> thread which may get suspended if not used for a while after the start >>>>>>> and >>>>>>> does not wake up but this is almost a blind guess. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> Yet another clue - this host kernel patch seems to help with the guest >>>>>> reboot but does not help with the initial 210 seconds delay: >>>>>> >>>>>> diff --git a/drivers/vhost/vhost.c b/drivers/vhost/vhost.c >>>>>> index 69068e0..5e67650 100644 >>>>>> --- a/drivers/vhost/vhost.c >>>>>> +++ b/drivers/vhost/vhost.c >>>>>> @@ -162,10 +162,10 @@ void vhost_work_queue(struct vhost_dev *dev, struct >>>>>> vhost_work *work) >>>>>> list_add_tail(&work->node, &dev->work_list); >>>>>> work->queue_seq++; >>>>>> spin_unlock_irqrestore(&dev->work_lock, flags); >>>>>> - wake_up_process(dev->worker); >>>>>> } else { >>>>>> spin_unlock_irqrestore(&dev->work_lock, flags); >>>>>> } >>>>>> + wake_up_process(dev->worker); >>>>>> } >>>>>> EXPORT_SYMBOL_GPL(vhost_work_queue); >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Interesting. Some kind of race? A missing memory barrier somewhere? >>>> >>>> I do not see how. I boot the guest and just wait 210 seconds, nothing >>>> happens to cause races. >>>> >>>> >>>>> Since it's all around startup, >>>>> you can try kicking the host eventfd in >>>>> vhost_net_start. >>>> >>>> >>>> How exactly? This did not help. Thanks. >>>> >>>> diff --git a/hw/net/vhost_net.c b/hw/net/vhost_net.c >>>> index 006576d..407ecf2 100644 >>>> --- a/hw/net/vhost_net.c >>>> +++ b/hw/net/vhost_net.c >>>> @@ -229,6 +229,17 @@ int vhost_net_start(VirtIODevice *dev, NetClientState >>>> *ncs, >>>> if (r < 0) { >>>> goto err; >>>> } >>>> + >>>> + VHostNetState *vn = tap_get_vhost_net(ncs[i].peer); >>>> + struct vhost_vring_file file = { >>>> + .index = i >>>> + }; >>>> + file.fd = >>>> event_notifier_get_fd(virtio_queue_get_host_notifier(dev->vq)); >>>> + r = ioctl(vn->dev.control, VHOST_SET_VRING_KICK, &file); >>> >>> No, this sets the notifier, it does not kick. >>> To kick you write 1 there: >>> uint6_t v = 1; >>> write(fd, &v, sizeof v); >> >> >> Please, be precise. How/where do I get that @fd? Is what I do correct? > > Yes.
Turns out that no. The control device in the host kernel does not implement write() so it always fails. This works: uint64_t v = 1; int fd = event_notifier_get_fd(&vq->host_notifier); int r = write(fd, &v, sizeof v); By "works" I mean it helps to wake the whole thing up and the guest's eth0 starts working after 3 minutes delay. >> What >> is uint6_t - uint8_t or uint16_t (neither works)? > > Sorry, should have been uint64_t. > >> May be it is a missing barrier - I rebooted machine several times and now >> sometime after even 240 seconds (not 210 as before) it works (but most of >> the time still does not)... >> >> >>>> + if (r) { >>>> + error_report("Error notifiyng host notifier: %d", -r); >>>> + goto err; >>>> + } >>>> } >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>>>>> If to remove vhost=on, it is all good. If to try Fedora19 >>>>>>>>> (v3.10-something), it all good again - works before and after reboot. >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> And there 2 questions: >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> 1. does anybody have any clue what might go wrong after reboot? >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> 2. Is there any good material to read about what exactly and how vhost >>>>>>>>> accelerates? >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> My understanding is that packets from the guest to the real network >>>>>>>>> are >>>>>>>>> going as: >>>>>>>>> 1. guest's virtio-pci-net does ioport(VIRTIO_PCI_QUEUE_NOTIFY) >>>>>>>>> 2. QEMU's net/virtio-net.c calls qemu_net_queue_deliver() >>>>>>>>> 3. QEMU's net/tap.c calls tap_write_packet() and this is how the host >>>>>>>>> knows >>>>>>>>> that there is a new packet. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> What about the documentation? :) or the idea? >>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Thanks! >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> This how I run QEMU: >>>>>>>>> ./qemu-system-ppc64 \ >>>>>>>>> -enable-kvm \ >>>>>>>>> -m 2048 \ >>>>>>>>> -machine pseries \ >>>>>>>>> -initrd 1.cpio \ >>>>>>>>> -kernel vml312_virtio_net_dbg \ >>>>>>>>> -nographic \ >>>>>>>>> -vga none \ >>>>>>>>> -netdev >>>>>>>>> tap,id=id3,ifname=tap-id3,script=ifup.sh,downscript=ifdown.sh,vhost=on >>>>>>>>> \ >>>>>>>>> -device virtio-net-pci,id=id4,netdev=id3,mac=C0:41:49:4b:00:00 >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> That is bridge config: >>>>>>>>> [aik@dyn232 ~]$ brctl show >>>>>>>>> bridge name bridge id STP enabled interfaces >>>>>>>>> brtest 8000.00145e992e88 no pin eth4 >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> The ifup.sh script: >>>>>>>>> ifconfig $1 hw ether ee:01:02:03:04:05 >>>>>>>>> /sbin/ifconfig $1 up >>>>>>>>> /usr/sbin/brctl addif brtest $1 >> >> >> >> -- >> Alexey -- Alexey