[PATCH v16 00/17] KVM RISC-V Support
Anup Patel
anup at brainfault.org
Wed Apr 21 05:08:01 BST 2021
Hi Palmer,
On Sat, Apr 10, 2021 at 12:28 AM Palmer Dabbelt <palmer at dabbelt.com> wrote:
>
> On Wed, 31 Mar 2021 02:21:58 PDT (-0700), pbonzini at redhat.com wrote:
> > On 30/03/21 07:48, Anup Patel wrote:
> >>
> >> It seems Andrew does not want to freeze H-extension until we have virtualization
> >> aware interrupt controller (such as RISC-V AIA specification) and IOMMU. Lot
> >> of us feel that these things can be done independently because RISC-V
> >> H-extension already has provisions for external interrupt controller with
> >> virtualization support.
>
> Sorry to hear that. It's really gotten to a point where I'm just
> embarrassed with how the RISC-V foundation is being run -- not sure if
> these other ones bled into Linux land, but this is the third ISA
> extension that's blown up over the last few weeks. We had a lot of
> discussion about this on the binutils/GCC side of things and I've
> managed to convince myself that coupling the software stack to the
> specification process isn't viable -- we made that decision under the
> assumption that specifications would actually progress through the
> process, but in practice that's just not happening.
>
> My goal with the RISC-V stuff has always been getting us to a place
> where we have real shipping products running a software stack that is as
> close as possible to the upstream codebases. I see that as the only way
> to get the software stack to a point where it can be sustainably
> maintained. The "only frozen extensions" policy was meant to help this
> by steering vendors towards a common base we could support, but in
> practice it's just not working out. The specification process is just
> so unreliable that in practice everything that gets built ends up
> relying on some non-standard behavior: whether it's a draft extension,
> some vendor-specific extension, or just some implementation quirks.
> There's always going to be some degree of that going on, but over the
> last year or so we've just stopped progressing.
>
> My worry with accepting the draft extensions is that we have no
> guarantee of compatibility between various drafts, which makes
> supporting multiple versions much more difficult. I've always really
> only been worried about supporting what gets implemented in a chip I can
> actually run code on, as I can at least guarantee that doesn't change.
> In practice that really has nothing to do with the specification freeze:
> even ratified specifications change in ways that break compatibility so
> we need to support multiple versions anyway. That's why we've got
> things like the K210 support (which doesn't quite follow the ratified
> specs) and are going to take the errata stuff. I hadn't been all that
> worried about the H support because there was a plan to get is to
> hardware, but with the change I'm not really sure how that's going to
> happen.
>
> > Yes, frankly that's pretty ridiculous as it's perfectly possible to
> > emulate the interrupt controller in software (and an IOMMU is not needed
> > at all if you are okay with emulated or paravirtualized devices---which
> > is almost always the case except for partitioning hypervisors).
>
> There's certainly some risk to freezing the H extension before we have
> all flavors of systems up and running. I spent a lot of time arguing
> that case years ago before we started telling people that the H
> extension just needed implementation, but that's not the decision we
> made. I don't really do RISC-V foundation stuff any more so I don't
> know why this changed, but it's just too late. It would be wonderful to
> have an implementation of everything we need to build out one of these
> complex systems, but I just just don't see how the current plan gets
> there: that's a huge amount of work and I don't see why anyone would
> commit to that when they can't count on it being supported when it's
> released.
>
> There are clearly some systems that can be built with this as it stands.
> They're not going to satisfy every use case, but at least we'll get
> people to start seriously using the spec. That's the only way I can see
> to move forward with this. It's pretty clear that sitting around and
> waiting doesn't work, we've tried that.
>
> > Palmer, are you okay with merging RISC-V KVM? Or should we place it in
> > drivers/staging/riscv/kvm?
>
> I'm certainly ready to drop my objections to merging the code based on
> it targeting a draft extension, but at a bare minimum I want to get a
> new policy in place that everyone can agree to for merging code. I've
> tried to draft up a new policy a handful of times this week, but I'm not
> really quite sure how to go about this: ultimately trying to build
> stable interfaces around an unstable ISA is just a losing battle. I've
> got a bunch of stuff going on right now, but I'll try to find some time
> to actually sit down and finish one.
Can you send the patch for the updated policy which we can review ??
Will it be possible to get KVM RISC-V merged for Linux-5.13 ?
Regards,
Anup
>
> I know it might seem odd to complain about how slowly things are going
> and then throw up another roadblock, but I really do think this is a
> very important thing to get right. I'm just not sure how we're going to
> get anywhere with RISC-V without someone providing stability, so I want
> to make sure that whatever we do here can be done reliably. If we don't
> I'm worried the vendors are just going to go off and do their own
> software stacks, which will make getting everyone back on the same page
> very difficult.
>
> > Either way, the best way to do it would be like this:
> >
> > 1) you apply patch 1 in a topic branch
> >
> > 2) you merge the topic branch in the risc-v tree
> >
> > 3) Anup merges the topic branch too and sends me a pull request.
> >
> > Paolo
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