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Re: [Xen-devel] [early RFC] ARM PCI Passthrough design document



Hi Julien,


Wouldnt it be better if the design proposed by cavium be extended by discussions and comeup with an agreeable to all design.

I didnt see any comments on the one I posted.

Putting an altogether new design without commenting on the one posted a month back, might not be a right approach



Regards,
Manish Jaggi

From: Julien Grall <julien.grall@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, December 29, 2016 7:34:15 PM
To: xen-devel; Stefano Stabellini
Cc: Edgar Iglesias (edgar.iglesias@xxxxxxxxxx); Steve Capper; Punit Agrawal; Wei Chen; Campbell Sean; Shanker Donthineni; Jiandi An; Jaggi, Manish; Roger Pau Monné; alistair.francis@xxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [early RFC] ARM PCI Passthrough design document
 
Hi all,

The document below is an early version of a design
proposal for PCI Passthrough in Xen. It aims to
describe from an high level perspective the interaction
with the different subsystems and how guest will be able
to discover and access PCI.

I am aware that a similar design has been posted recently
by Cavium (see [1]), however the approach to expose PCI
to guest is different. We have request to run unmodified
baremetal OS on Xen, a such guest would directly
access the devices and no PV drivers will be used.

That's why this design is based on emulating a root controller.
This also has the advantage to have the VM interface as close
as baremetal allowing the guest to use firmware tables to discover
the devices.

Currently on ARM, Xen does not have any knowledge about PCI devices.
This means that IOMMU and interrupt controller (such as ITS)
requiring specific configuration will not work with PCI even with
DOM0.

The PCI Passthrough work could be divided in 2 phases:
        * Phase 1: Register all PCI devices in Xen => will allow
                   to use ITS and SMMU with PCI in Xen
        * Phase 2: Assign devices to guests

This document aims to describe the 2 phases, but for now only phase
1 is fully described.

I have sent the design document to start to gather feedback on
phase 1.

Cheers,

[1] https://lists.xen.org/archives/html/xen-devel/2016-12/msg00224.html

========================
% PCI pass-through support on ARM
% Julien Grall <julien.grall@xxxxxxxxxx>
% Draft A

# Preface

This document aims to describe the components required to enable PCI
passthrough on ARM.

This is an early draft and some questions are still unanswered, when this is
the case the text will contain XXX.

# Introduction

PCI passthrough allows to give control of physical PCI devices to guest. This
means that the guest will have full and direct access to the PCI device.

ARM is supporting one kind of guest that is exploiting as much as possible
virtualization support in hardware. The guest will rely on PV driver only
for IO (e.g block, network), interrupts will come through the virtualized
interrupt controller. This means that there are no big changes required
within the kernel.

By consequence, it would be possible to replace PV drivers by assigning real
devices to the guest for I/O access. Xen on ARM would therefore be able to
run unmodified operating system.

To achieve this goal, it looks more sensible to go towards emulating the
host bridge (we will go into more details later). A guest would be able
to take advantage of the firmware tables and obviating the need for a specific
driver for Xen.

Thus in this document we follow the emulated host bridge approach.

# PCI terminologies

Each PCI device under a host bridge is uniquely identified by its Requester ID
(AKA RID). A Requester ID is a triplet of Bus number, Device number, and
Function.

When the platform has multiple host bridges, the software can add fourth
number called Segment to differentiate host bridges. A PCI device will
then uniquely by segment:bus:device:function (AKA SBDF).

So given a specific SBDF, it would be possible to find the host bridge and the
RID associated to a PCI device.

# Interaction of the PCI subsystem with other subsystems

In order to have a PCI device fully working, Xen will need to configure
other subsystems subsytems such as the SMMU and the Interrupt Controller.

The interaction expected between the PCI subsystem and the other is:
    * Add a device
    * Remove a device
    * Assign a device to a guest
    * Deassign a device from a guest

XXX: Detail the interaction when assigning/deassigning device

The following subsections will briefly describe the interaction from an
higher level perspective. Implementation details (callback, structure...)
is out of scope.

## SMMU

The SMMU will be used to isolate the PCI device when accessing the memory
(for instance DMA and MSI Doorbells). Often the SMMU will be configured using
a StreamID (SID) that can be deduced from the RID with the help of the firmware
tables (see below).

Whilst in theory all the memory transaction issued by a PCI device should
go through the SMMU, on certain platforms some of the memory transaction may
not reach the SMMU because they are interpreted by the host bridge. For
instance this could happen if the MSI doorbell is built into the PCI host
bridge. See [6] for more details.

XXX: I think this could be solved by using the host memory layout when
creating a guest with PCI devices => Detail it.

## Interrupt controller

PCI supports three kind of interrupts: legacy interrupt, MSI and MSI-X. On ARM
legacy interrupts will be mapped to SPIs. MSI and MSI-x will be
either mapped to SPIs or LPIs.

Whilst SPIs can be programmed using an interrupt number, LPIs can be
identified via a pair (DeviceID, EventID) when configure through the ITS.

The DeviceID is a unique identifier for each MSI-capable device that can
be deduced from the RID with the help of the firmware tables (see below).

XXX: Figure out if something is necessary for GICv2m

# Information available in the firmware tables

## ACPI

### Host bridges

The static table MCFG (see 4.2 in [1]) will describe the host bridges available
at boot and supporting ECAM. Unfortunately there are platforms out there
(see [2]) that re-use MCFG to describe host bridge that are not fully ECAM
compatible.

This means that Xen needs to account for possible quirks in the host bridge.
The Linux community are working on a patch series for see (see [2] and [3])
where quirks will be detected with:
    * OEM ID
    * OEM Table ID
    * OEM Revision
    * PCI Segment (from _SEG)
    * PCI bus number range (from _CRS, wildcard allowed)

Based on what Linux is currently doing, there are two kind of quirks:
    * Accesses to the configuration space of certain sizes are not allowed
    * A specific driver is necessary for driving the host bridge

The former is straight forward to solve, the latter will require more thought.
Instantiation of a specific driver for the host controller can be easily done
if Xen has the information to detect it. However, those drivers may require
resources described in ASL (see [4] for instance).

XXX: Need more investigation to know whether the missing information should
be passed by DOM0 or hardcoded in the driver.

### Finding the StreamID and DeviceID

The static table IORT (see [5]) will provide information that will help to
deduce the StreamID and DeviceID from a given RID.

## Device Tree

### Host bridges

Each Device Tree node associated to a host bridge will have at least the
following properties (see bindings in [8]):
    - device_type: will always be "pci".
    - compatible: a string indicating which driver to instantiate

The node may also contain optional properties such as:
    - linux,pci-domain: assign a fix segment number
    - bus-range: indicate the range of bus numbers supported

When the property linux,pci-domain is not present, the operating system would
have to allocate the segment number for each host bridges. Because the
algorithm to allocate the segment is not specified, it is necessary for
DOM0 and Xen to agree on the number before any PCI is been added.

### Finding the StreamID and DeviceID

### StreamID

The first binding existing (see [9]) for SMMU didn't have a way to describe the
relationship between RID and StreamID, it was assumed that StreamID == RequesterID.
This bindins has now been deprecated in favor of a generic binding (see [10])
which will use the property "iommu-map" to describe the relationship between
an RID, the associated IOMMU and the StreamID.

### DeviceID

The relationship between the RID and the DeviceID can be found using the
property "msi-map" (see [11]).

# Discovering PCI devices

Whilst PCI devices are currently available in DOM0, the hypervisor does not
have any knowledge of them. The first step of supporting PCI passthrough is
to make Xen aware of the PCI devices.

Xen will require access to the PCI configuration space to retrieve information
for the PCI devices or access it on behalf of the guest via the emulated
host bridge.

## Discovering and register hostbridge

Both ACPI and Device Tree do not provide enough information to fully
instantiate an host bridge driver. In the case of ACPI, some data may come
from ASL, whilst for Device Tree the segment number is not available.

So Xen needs to rely on DOM0 to discover the host bridges and notify Xen
with all the relevant informations. This will be done via a new hypercall
PHYSDEVOP_pci_host_bridge_add. The layout of the structure will be:

struct physdev_pci_host_bridge_add
{
    /* IN */
    uint16_t seg;
    /* Range of bus supported by the host bridge */
    uint8_t  bus_start;
    uint8_t  bus_nr;
    uint32_t res0;  /* Padding */
    /* Information about the configuration space region */
    uint64_t cfg_base;
    uint64_t cfg_size;
}

DOM0 will issue the hypercall PHYSDEVOP_pci_host_bridge_add for each host
bridge available on the platform. When Xen is receiving the hypercall, the
the driver associated to the host bridge will be instantiated.

XXX: Shall we limit DOM0 the access to the configuration space from that
moment?

## Discovering and register PCI

Similarly to x86, PCI devices will be discovered by DOM0 and register
using the hypercalls PHYSDEVOP_pci_add_device or PHYSDEVOP_manage_pci_add_ext.

By default all the PCI devices will be assigned to DOM0. So Xen would have
to configure the SMMU and Interrupt Controller to allow DOM0 to use the PCI
devices. As mentioned earlier, those subsystems will require the StreamID
and DeviceID. Both can be deduced from the RID.

XXX: How to hide PCI devices from DOM0?

# Glossary

ECAM: Enhanced Configuration Mechanism
SBDF: Segment Bus Device Function. The segment is a software concept.
MSI: Message Signaled Interrupt
SPI: Shared Peripheral Interrupt
LPI: Locality-specific Peripheral Interrupt
ITS: Interrupt Translation Service

# Bibliography

[1] PCI firmware specification, rev 3.2
[2] https://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-pci/msg56715.html
[3] https://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-pci/msg56723.html
[4] https://www.spinics.net/lists/linux-pci/msg56728.html
[5] http://infocenter.arm.com/help/topic/com.arm.doc.den0049b/DEN0049B_IO_Remapping_Table.pdf
[6] https://www.spinics.net/lists/kvm/msg140116.html
[7] http://www.firmware.org/1275/bindings/pci/pci2_1.pdf
[8] Documents/devicetree/bindings/pci
[9] Documents/devicetree/bindings/iommu/arm,smmu.txt
[10] Document/devicetree/bindings/pci/pci-iommu.txt
[11] Documents/devicetree/bindings/pci/pci-msi.txt

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