On Mon, 4 Dec 2017 18:33:24 +0100 Halil Pasic <pa...@linux.vnet.ibm.com> wrote:
> On 12/04/2017 05:40 PM, Cornelia Huck wrote: > > On Mon, 4 Dec 2017 12:17:06 +0100 > > Christian Borntraeger <borntrae...@de.ibm.com> wrote: > > > >> On 11/28/2017 02:46 PM, Cornelia Huck wrote: > >>> The autogenerated nics should be treated as any other device; use > >>> qdev_set_id() to have them show up under peripheral-anon. > >>> > >> I think this is fine, but then I ask myself how x86 does this. So I tried > >> to > >> find out how the pc-q35 machine does this but I somehow failed to > >> understand > >> how they do it. Do you have any clue? > > > > It seems they don't. If you start up a machine with only autogenerated > > devices, you won't find anything under peripheral{-anon}, but several > > devices under unattached. > > > > So, maybe we should change this for everything? Or just leave it alone? > > > > (The css-bridge change is a different thing IMO, it clearly should be > > attached to the machine.) > > > > IMHO (try to) change everywhere. The devices are attached to the machine, > and them showing up as unattached is misleading. IMHO we still to have the > 'is it API or not' question/problem so we need to be careful. > > Another think I was wondering about is ids: there are QMP commands which > designate devices by path and there are commands which designate by id > (and we even have either-or via the same parameter in case of device_del). > Since the paths do not seem to be directly assigned/controlled by the user > ([1]] but id's are I would argue that ids are easier to understand and > use. Would generating an id for each auto-generated device be a good idea? > > I'm trying to figure out, how the QAPI is supposed to be used, and feel like. > So take my comments with a grain of salt. > > [1] One can, but does not have to specify the bus. Libvirt does not seem > to for virtio-ccw devices. And if one were to, the other patch in the > series could break that code. I'm inclined to rather just drop this patch and put it into the backlog for idle times, before this escalates into a wholesale rewrite of core infrastructure.