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Re: [Xen-devel] RFC: Automatically making a PCI device assignable in the config file



On 10/07/13 14:55, Ian Jackson wrote:
George Dunlap writes ("Re: [Xen-devel] RFC: Automatically making a PCI device 
assignable in the config file"):
Auto-seizing is fairly dangerous; you could easily accidentally yank out
the ethernet card, or even the disk that dom0 is using.  I really think
it should have to be enabled on a device-by-device basis.
I don't think this makes any sense.

In practice you are saying that in order to avoid mistakes, the local
admin must provide the BDF of the device to be passed through in two
separate places.

That's not what I had in mind; what I had in mind was something like this:

pci = [ '08:04.1,seize=1' ]

Or alternately:

xl pci-attach h0 08:04.1,seize=1

One could also imagine having something in xl.conf like the following:

pci.autoseize = [ '08:04.1','01:00.0' ]

In this case you wouldn't be simply copy and pasting, because you'd probably have different domains handling each device. But in any case, this was just exploring the alternatives -- I don't think that's the best thing to do.

But that doesn't actually help.  If this is all properly documented
and so forth (ie, if the admin has a smooth experience and doesn't
trip over having dailed to "seize" the device), they will just
cut-and-paste the same value into both places in the config.

They will also mutter under their breath to ask why this is
necessary...

If someone can accidentally type "xl pci-attach 08:04.0" instead of "xl pci-attach 08.04.1" and suddenly completely lose their network connectivity (or yank their hard drive out), then I think they'll appreciate it.

In any case, at the moment it's much worse: you have to either scriptwise run "xl pci-assignable-add" a device, or add an exclusion on the Linux commandline in grub. So far I'm the only person I know who has complained about it. :-)

 -George

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