On Tue, Sep 19, 2017 at 06:20:20PM +1000, David Gibson wrote: > On Mon, Sep 11, 2017 at 07:12:14PM +0200, Cédric Le Goater wrote: > > On a POWER9 sPAPR machine, the Client Architecture Support (CAS) > > negotiation process determines whether the guest operates with an > > interrupt controller using the XICS legacy model, as found on POWER8, > > or in XIVE exploitation mode, the newer POWER9 interrupt model. This > > patchset is a proposal to add XIVE support in POWER9 sPAPR machine. > > > > Follows a model for the XIVE interrupt controller and support for the > > Hypervisor's calls which are used to configure the interrupt sources > > and the event/notification queues of the guest. The last patch > > integrates XIVE in the sPAPR machine. > > > > Code is here: > > > An overall comment: > > I note in several replies here that I think the way XICS objects are > re-used for XIVE is really ugly, and I think it will make future > maintenance pretty painful. > > I'm thinking maybe trying to support the CAS negotiation of interrupt > controller from day 1 is warping the design. A better approach might > be first to implement XIVE only when given a specific machine option - > guest gets one or the other and can't negotiate. > > That should allow a more natural XIVE design to emerge, *then* we can > look at what's necessary to make boot-time negotiation possible.
Actually, it just occurred to me that we might be making life hard for ourselves by trying to actually switch between full XICS and XIVE models. Coudln't we have new machine types always construct the XIVE infrastructure, but then implement the XICS RTAS and hcalls in terms of the XIVE virtual hardware. Since something more or less equivalent has already been done in both OPAL and the host kernel, I'm guessing this shouldn't be too hard at this point. -- David Gibson | I'll have my music baroque, and my code david AT gibson.dropbear.id.au | minimalist, thank you. NOT _the_ _other_ | _way_ _around_! http://www.ozlabs.org/~dgibson
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