[PATCH v13 16/24] virt: gunyah: Translate gh_rm_hyp_resource into gunyah_resource

Elliot Berman quic_eberman at quicinc.com
Fri Jun 9 13:00:16 PDT 2023



On 6/5/2023 12:49 PM, Alex Elder wrote:
> On 5/9/23 3:47 PM, Elliot Berman wrote:
>> When booting a Gunyah virtual machine, the host VM may gain capabilities
>> to interact with resources for the guest virtual machine. Examples of
>> such resources are vCPUs or message queues. To use those resources, we
>> need to translate the RM response into a gunyah_resource structure which
>> are useful to Linux drivers. Presently, Linux drivers need only to know
>> the type of resource, the capability ID, and an interrupt.
>>
>> On ARM64 systems, the interrupt reported by Gunyah is the GIC interrupt
>> ID number and always a SPI.
>>
>> Signed-off-by: Elliot Berman <quic_eberman at quicinc.com>
> 
> Please zero the automatic variable in the place I suggest it.
> I have two other comments/questions.  Otherwise, this looks good.
> 
> Reviewed-by: Alex Elder <elder at linaro.org>
> 
>> ---

...

>> +struct gh_resource *gh_rm_alloc_resource(struct gh_rm *rm, struct 
>> gh_rm_hyp_resource *hyp_resource)
>> +{
>> +    struct gh_resource *ghrsc;
>> +    int ret;
>> +
>> +    ghrsc = kzalloc(sizeof(*ghrsc), GFP_KERNEL);
>> +    if (!ghrsc)
>> +        return NULL;
>> +
>> +    ghrsc->type = hyp_resource->type;
>> +    ghrsc->capid = le64_to_cpu(hyp_resource->cap_id);
>> +    ghrsc->irq = IRQ_NOTCONNECTED;
>> +    ghrsc->rm_label = le32_to_cpu(hyp_resource->resource_label);
>> +    if (hyp_resource->virq) {
>> +        struct gh_irq_chip_data irq_data = {
>> +            .gh_virq = le32_to_cpu(hyp_resource->virq),
>> +        };
>> +
>> +        ret = irq_domain_alloc_irqs(rm->irq_domain, 1, NUMA_NO_NODE, 
>> &irq_data);
>> +        if (ret < 0) {
>> +            dev_err(rm->dev,
>> +                "Failed to allocate interrupt for resource %d label: 
>> %d: %d\n",
>> +                ghrsc->type, ghrsc->rm_label, ghrsc->irq);
> 
> Is it reasonable to return in this case without indicating to the
> caller that something is wrong?
> 

I wasn't sure what to do here since this is unexpected edge case. Not 
returning would cause a client's "request_irq" to fail down the line if 
the client was interested in the irq. I had picked not to return since 
this error doesn't put us in an unrecoverable state. No one currently 
wants to try to recover from that error, so I'm really just deferring 
the real error handling until later.

I can return ret here.

>> +        } else {
>> +            ghrsc->irq = ret;
>> +        }
>> +    }
>> +
>> +    return ghrsc;

...



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