[libvirt PATCH v3 00/21] Add support for persistent mediated devices

Erik Skultety eskultet at redhat.com
Mon Feb 1 09:45:43 UTC 2021


On Mon, Feb 01, 2021 at 09:42:32AM +0000, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 29, 2021 at 05:34:36PM -0600, Jonathon Jongsma wrote:
> > On Thu, 7 Jan 2021 17:43:54 +0100
> > Erik Skultety <eskultet at redhat.com> wrote:
> > 
> > > > Tested with v6.10.0-283-g1948d4e61e.
> > > > 
> > > > 1.Can define/start/destroy mdev device successfully;
> > > > 
> > > > 2.'virsh nodedev-list' has no '--active' option, which is
> > > > inconsistent with the description in the patch:
> > > > # virsh nodedev-list --active
> > > > error: command 'nodedev-list' doesn't support option --active
> > > > 
> > > > 3.virsh client hang when trying to destroy a mdev device which is
> > > > using by a vm, and after that all 'virsh nodev*' cmds will hang. If
> > > > restarting llibvirtd after that, libvirtd will hang.  
> > > 
> > > It hangs because underneath a write to the 'remove' sysfs attribute
> > > is now blocking for some reason and since we're relying on mdevctl to
> > > do it for us, hence "it hangs". I'm not trying to make an excuse,
> > > it's plain wrong. I'd love to rely on such a basic functionality, but
> > > it looks like we'll have to go with a extremely ugly workaround and
> > > try to get the list of active domains from the nodedev driver and see
> > > whether any of them has the device assigned before we try to destroy
> > > the mdev via the nodedev driver.
> > 
> > So, I've been trying to figure out a way to do this, but as far as
> > I know, there's no way to get a list of active domains from within the
> > nodedev driver, and I can't think of any better ways to handle it. Any
> > ideas?
> 
> Correct, the nodedev driver isn't permitted to talk to any of the virt
> drivers.

Oh, not even via secondary connection? What makes nodedev so special, since we
can open a secondary connection from e.g. the storage driver?

> 
> Is there anything in sysfs which reports whether the device is in use ?

Nothing that I know of, the way it used to work was that you tried to write to
sysfs and kernel returned a write error with "device in use" or something like
that, but that has changed since :(.

Erik




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