On Fri, Aug 14, 2020 at 01:30:00PM +0100, Sean Mooney wrote:
On Thu, Aug 13, 2020 at 12:24:50PM +0800, Jason Wang wrote:
On 2020/8/10 下午3:46, Yan Zhao wrote:
driver is it handled by?
It looks that the devlink is for network device specific, and in devlink.h, it says include/uapi/linux/devlink.h - Network physical device Netlink interface,
Actually not, I think there used to have some discussion last year and the conclusion is to remove this comment.
It supports IB and probably vDPA in the future.
hmm... sorry, I didn't find the referred discussion. only below discussion regarding to why to add devlink.
https://www.mail-archive.com/netdev@vger.kernel.org/msg95801.html
This doesn't seem to be too much related to networking? Why can't something like this be in sysfs?
It is related to networking quite bit. There has been couple of iteration of this, including sysfs and configfs implementations. There has been a consensus reached that this should be done by netlink. I believe netlink is really the best for this purpose. Sysfs is not a good idea
https://www.mail-archive.com/netdev@vger.kernel.org/msg96102.html
there is already a way to change eth/ib via echo 'eth' > /sys/bus/pci/drivers/mlx4_core/0000:02:00.0/mlx4_port1
sounds like this is another way to achieve the same?
It is. However the current way is driver-specific, not correct. For mlx5, we need the same, it cannot be done in this way. Do devlink is the correct way to go. im not sure i agree with that. standardising a filesystem based api that is used across all vendors is also a valid
On Fri, 2020-08-14 at 13:16 +0800, Yan Zhao wrote: option. that said if devlink is the right choice form a kerenl perspective by all means use it but i have not heard a convincing argument for why it actually better. with tthat said we have been uing tools like ethtool to manage aspect of nics for decades so its not that strange an idea to use a tool and binary protocoal rather then a text based interface for this but there are advantages to both approches.
Yes, I agree with you.
https://lwn.net/Articles/674867/ There a is need for some userspace API that would allow to expose things that are not directly related to any device class like net_device of ib_device, but rather chip-wide/switch-ASIC-wide stuff.
Use cases: 1) get/set of port type (Ethernet/InfiniBand) 2) monitoring of hardware messages to and from chip 3) setting up port splitters - split port into multiple ones and squash again, enables usage of splitter cable 4) setting up shared buffers - shared among multiple ports within one chip
we actually can also retrieve the same information through sysfs, .e.g
- [path to device]
|--- migration | |--- self | | |---device_api | | |---mdev_type | | |---software_version | | |---device_id | | |---aggregator | |--- compatible | | |---device_api | | |---mdev_type | | |---software_version | | |---device_id | | |---aggregator
I feel like it's not very appropriate for a GPU driver to use this interface. Is that right?
I think not though most of the users are switch or ethernet devices. It doesn't prevent you from inventing new abstractions.
so need to patch devlink core and the userspace devlink tool? e.g. devlink migration and devlink python libs if openstack was to use it directly. we do have caes where we just frok a process and execaute a comannd in a shell with or without elevated privladge but we really dont like doing that due to the performacne impacat and security implciations so where we can use python bindign over c apis we do. pyroute2 is the only python lib i know off of the top of my head that support devlink so we would need to enhacne it to support this new devlink api. there may be otherss i have not really looked in the past since we dont need to use devlink at all today.
Note that devlink is based on netlink, netlink has been widely used by various subsystems other than networking.
the advantage of netlink I see is that it can monitor device status and notify upper layer that migration database needs to get updated. But not sure whether openstack would like to use this capability. As Sean said, it's heavy for openstack. it's heavy for vendor driver as well :)
And devlink monitor now listens the notification and dumps the state changes. If we want to use it, need to let it forward the notification and dumped info to openstack, right? i dont think we would use direct devlink monitoring in nova even if it was avaiable. we could but we already poll libvirt and the system for other resouce periodicly. so, if we use file system based approach, could openstack periodically check and update the migration info? e.g. every minute, read /sys/<path to device>/migration/self/*, and if there are any file disappearing or appearing or content changes, just let the placement know.
Then when about to start migration, check source device's /sys/<path to src device>/migration/compatible/* and searches the placement if there are existing device matching to it, if yes, create vm with the device and migrate to it; if not, and if it's an mdev, try to create a matching one and migrate to it. (to create a matching mdev, I guess openstack can follow below sequence: 1. find a target device with the same device id (e.g. parent pci id) 2. create an mdev with matching mdev type 3. adjust other vendor specific attributes 4. if 2 or 3 fails, go to 1 again ) is this approach feasible?
we likely wouldl just add monitoriv via devlink to that periodic task. we certenly would not use it to detect a migration or a need to update a migration database(not sure what that is) by migration database, I meant the traits in the placement. :)
if a periodic monitoring or devlink is required, then periodically monitor sysfs is also viable, right?
in reality if we can consume this info indirectly via a libvirt api that will be the appcoh we will take at least for the libvirt driver in nova. for cyborg they may take a different appoch. we already use pyroute2 in 2 projects, os-vif and neutron and it does have devlink support so the burden of using devlink is not that high for openstack but its a less frineadly interface for configuration tools like ansiable vs a filesystem based approch.