On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 11:32 PM Michael S. Tsirkin <m...@redhat.com> wrote: > > On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 12:51:31PM +0200, Claudio Fontana wrote: > > Hi Michael and all, > > > > I have started researching a qemu / ovs / dpdk bug: > > > > https://inbox.dpdk.org/dev/322122fb-619d-96f6-5c3e-9eabdbf38...@redhat.com/T/ > > > > that seems to be affecting multiple parties in the telco space, > > > > and during this process I noticed that qemu/hw/virtio/virtio.c does not do > > a full virtio reset > > in virtio_set_status, when receiving a status value of 0. > > > > It seems it has always been this way, so I am clearly missing / forgetting > > something basic, > > > > I checked the virtio spec at https://docs.oasis-open.org/ > > > > and from: > > > > " > > 4.1.4.3 Common configuration structure layout > > > > device_status > > The driver writes the device status here (see 2.1). Writing 0 into this > > field resets the device. > > > > " > > > > and > > > > " > > 2.4.1 Device Requirements: Device Reset > > A device MUST reinitialize device status to 0 after receiving a reset. > > " > > > > I would conclude that in virtio.c::virtio_set_status we should > > unconditionally do a full virtio_reset. > > > > Instead, we have just the check: > > > > if ((vdev->status & VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER_OK) != > > (val & VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER_OK)) { > > virtio_set_started(vdev, val & VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER_OK); > > } > > > > which just sets the started field, > > > > and then we have the call to the virtio device class set_status > > (virtio_net...), > > but the VirtioDevice is not fully reset, as per the virtio_reset() call we > > are missing: > > > > " > > vdev->start_on_kick = false; > > vdev->started = false; > > vdev->broken = false; > > vdev->guest_features = 0; > > vdev->queue_sel = 0; > > vdev->status = 0; > > vdev->disabled = false; > > qatomic_set(&vdev->isr, 0); > > vdev->config_vector = VIRTIO_NO_VECTOR; > > virtio_notify_vector(vdev, vdev->config_vector); > > > > for(i = 0; i < VIRTIO_QUEUE_MAX; i++) { > > ... initialize vdev->vq[i] ... > > } > > " > > > > Doing a full reset seems to fix the problem for me, so I can send tentative > > patches if necessary, > > but what am I missing here? > > > > Thanks, > > > > Claudio > > > > -- > > Claudio Fontana > > Engineering Manager Virtualization, SUSE Labs Core > > > > SUSE Software Solutions Italy Srl > > > So for example for pci: > > case VIRTIO_PCI_STATUS: > > > .... > > if (vdev->status == 0) { > virtio_pci_reset(DEVICE(proxy)); > } > > which I suspect is a bug because: > > static void virtio_pci_reset(DeviceState *qdev) > { > VirtIOPCIProxy *proxy = VIRTIO_PCI(qdev); > VirtioBusState *bus = VIRTIO_BUS(&proxy->bus); > PCIDevice *dev = PCI_DEVICE(qdev); > int i; > > virtio_bus_reset(bus);
Note that we do virtio_reset() here. > msix_unuse_all_vectors(&proxy->pci_dev); > > for (i = 0; i < VIRTIO_QUEUE_MAX; i++) { > proxy->vqs[i].enabled = 0; > proxy->vqs[i].num = 0; > proxy->vqs[i].desc[0] = proxy->vqs[i].desc[1] = 0; > proxy->vqs[i].avail[0] = proxy->vqs[i].avail[1] = 0; > proxy->vqs[i].used[0] = proxy->vqs[i].used[1] = 0; > } > > > so far so good > > if (pci_is_express(dev)) { > pcie_cap_deverr_reset(dev); > pcie_cap_lnkctl_reset(dev); > > pci_set_word(dev->config + dev->exp.pm_cap + PCI_PM_CTRL, 0); > } > > this part is wrong I think, it got here by mistake since the same > function is used for bus level reset. > > Jason, Marcel, any input? Yes, I think we don't need PCI stuff here. We do virtio reset not pci. Thanks > > -- > MST >