Michael S. Tsirkin <m...@redhat.com> writes: > On Tue, Jul 30, 2019 at 03:14:00PM +0200, Cornelia Huck wrote: >> On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 14:17:48 +0200 >> Andrea Bolognani <abolo...@redhat.com> wrote: >> >> > On Tue, 2019-07-30 at 13:35 +0200, Cornelia Huck wrote: >> > > On Tue, 30 Jul 2019 12:25:30 +0200 >> > > Andrea Bolognani <abolo...@redhat.com> wrote: >> > > > Can you please make sure virtio-mmio uses the existing interface >> > > > instead of introducing a new one? >> > > >> > > FWIW, I really hate virtio-pci's disable-modern/disable-legacy... for a >> > > starter, what is 'modern'? Will we have 'ultra-modern' in the future? >> > >> > AIUI the modern/legacy terminology is part of the VirtIO spec, so >> > while I agree that it's not necessarily the least prone to ambiguity >> > at least it's well defined. >> >> Legacy is, modern isn't :) Devices/drivers are conforming to the >> standard, I don't think there's a special term for that. > > Right, if we followed the spec, disable-modern would have been > force-legacy. > > I'm fine with adding force-legacy for everyone and asking tools to > transition if there. Document it's same as disable-modern for pci. > Cornelia?
FWIW, for this patch, I'm perfectly fine with changing the "modern" property to "force-legacy", with "true" as the default value. >> > >> > > It is also quite backwards with the 'disable' terminology. >> > >> > That's also true. I never claimed the way virtio-pci does it is >> > perfect! >> > >> > > We also have a different mechanism for virtio-ccw ('max_revision', >> > > which covers a bit more than virtio-1; it doesn't have a 'min_revision', >> > > as negotiating the revision down is fine), so I don't see why >> > > virtio-mmio should replicate the virtio-pci mechanism. >> > > >> > > Also, IIUC, virtio-mmio does not have transitional devices, but either >> > > version 1 (legacy) or version 2 (virtio-1). It probably makes more >> > > sense to expose the device version instead; either as an exact version >> > > (especially if it isn't supposed to go up without incompatible >> > > changes), or with some min/max concept (where version 1 would stand a >> > > bit alone, so that would probably be a bit awkward.) >> > >> > I think that if reinventing the wheel is generally agreed not to be >> > a good idea, then it stands to reason that reinventing it twice can >> > only be described as absolute madness :) >> > >> > We should have a single way to control the VirtIO protocol version >> > that works for all VirtIO devices, regardless of transport. We might >> > even want to have virtio-*-{device,ccw}-non-transitional to mirror >> > the existing virtio-*-pci-non-transitional. >> > >> > FWIW, libvirt already implements support for (non)-transitional >> > virtio-pci devices using either the dedicated devices or the base >> > virtio-pci plus the disable-{modern,legacy} attributes. >> >> One problem (besides my dislike of the existing virtio-pci >> interfaces :) is that pci, ccw, and mmio all have slightly different >> semantics. >> >> - pci: If we need to keep legacy support around, we cannot enable some >> features (IIRC, pci-e, maybe others as well.) That means transitional >> devices are in some ways inferior to virtio-1 only devices, so it >> makes a lot of sense to be able to configure devices without legacy >> support. The differences between legacy and virtio-1 are quite large. >> - ccw: Has revisions negotiated between device and driver; virtio-1 >> requires revision 1 or higher. (Legacy drivers that don't know the >> concept of revisions automatically get revision 0.) Differences >> between legacy and virtio-1 are mostly virtqueue endianness and some >> control structures. >> - mmio: Has device versions offered by the device, the driver can take >> it or leave it. No transitional devices. Differences don't look as >> large as the ones for pci, either. >> >> So, if we were to duplicate the same scheme as for pci for ccw and mmio >> as well, we'd get >> >> - ccw: devices that support revision 0 only (disable-modern), that act >> as today, or that support at least revision 1 (disable-legacy). We >> still need to keep max_revision around for backwards compatibility. >> Legacy only makes sense for compat machines (although this is >> equivalent to max_revision 0); I don't see a reason why you would >> want virtio-1 only devices, unless you'd want to rip out legacy >> support in QEMU completely. > > Reduce security attack surface slightly. Save some cycles > (down the road) on branches in the endian-ness handling. > Make sure your guests > are all up to date in preparation to the day when legacy will go away. > > Not a huge win, for sure, but hey - it's something. > >> - mmio: devices that support version 1 (disable-modern), or version 2 >> (disable-legacy). You cannot have both at the same time. Whether this >> makes sense depends on whether there will be a version 3 in the >> future. >> >> So, this might make some sense for mmio; for ccw, I don't see any >> advantages other than confusing people further...
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