On Tue, Aug 2, 2016 at 3:22 PM, Mark <kram...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > Today I updated my arch linux system. It had only been a week since the > last update. Not notices applicable to my update had been posted. > > My setup is a Intel i7-4790S, ASRock mobo supporting vt-d and all the > goodies. > > I have libvirt using virt-manager for my win7 VM, with nvidia 750 gpu and > hdmi audio device passed through to it, also the onboard intel audio > controller (non-hdmi). These 3 devices are all on the same iommu group. >
I have serious doubts that this was ever the case. The GPU and GPU audio are always grouped together because there's not ACS on the endpoint. The root port might get involved, which might drag in other root ports if ACS is missing there and it's part of a multifunction device. But I have never seen the _onboard_ audio get wrapped into that since it's on a separate slot on the root complex. Clearly 'sudo lspci -vvv' and listing of the iommu groups is going to be required here. > Before the update, while the VM was powered off, my host played audio > through the onboard intel audio controller. When the VM was on, audio from > the VM played through the onboard audio controller and the host lost audio > output. This is the desired behavior. Another behavior in the past was to > only assign the gpu and hdmi audio on the gpu, but leave the onboard audio > unassigned to vfio. > > After the update, pulse audio no longer reports audio devices in the > host. Trying to figure out why this is, I've removed all passthrough > devices from all VMs in virt-manager, removed the vfio module load options, > but vfio_pci still claims the 3 devices. The only way I've been able to > get the audio devices back is to BLACKLIST the vfio module. > vfio-pci will not bind to any devices unless you tell it to via an ids= option or scripts to make use of driver_override, so it sounds a lot like you're missing some of the setup done previously to the system, perhaps not rebuilding the initramfs/initrd to actually make the changes take effect. Perhaps you made changes to configuration files before update that were only incorporated when the initrd was built for the newly installed kernel. > My questions are: > > 1. Is there any other way besides /etc/modules.d/vfio.conf that vfio could > be told to claim a device on boot? > The init process is just a bunch of scripts, so there's pretty much an infinite number of ways once you understand where things fit. > 2. Is ACS impacting my ability to have the host use a device claimed by > iommu because of a recent change? > You haven't actually said what kernels were new and old, but there haven't been any changes related to ACS on haswell for a long time. > 3. Is there another way of going about assigning a claimed device to the > host? > unbind from one driver, bind to another via sysfs. > 4. Can I no longer only assign 2 of 3 devices in an iommu group to vfio? > *endpoints* within an iommu group must all be detached from the host drivers, this has always been the case, nothing has changed here.
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