On Tue, Jul 21, 2020 at 11:49:04AM +0100, Alex Bennée wrote:
> Stefan Hajnoczi <stefa...@gmail.com> writes:
> > 2. Alexander Graf's idea for a new Linux driver that provides an
> > enforcing software IOMMU. This would be a character device driver that
> > is mmapped by the device emulation process (either vhost-user-style on
> > the host or another VMM for inter-VM device emulation). The Driver VMM
> > can program mappings into the device and the page tables in the device
> > emulation process will be updated. This way the Driver VMM can share
> > memory specific regions of guest RAM with the device emulation process
> > and revoke those mappings later.
> 
> I'm wondering if there is enough plumbing on the guest side so a guest
> can use the virtio-iommu to mark out exactly which bits of memory the
> virtual device can have access to? At a minimum the virtqueues need to
> be accessible and for larger transfers maybe a bounce buffer. However
> for speed you want as wide as possible mapping but no more. It would be
> nice for example if a block device could load data directly into the
> guests block cache (zero-copy) but without getting a view of the kernels
> internal data structures.

Maybe Jean-Philippe or Eric can answer that?

> Another thing that came across in the call was quite a lot of
> assumptions about QEMU and Linux w.r.t virtio. While our project will
> likely have Linux as a guest OS we are looking specifically at enabling
> virtio for Type-1 hypervisors like Xen and the various safety certified
> proprietary ones. It is unlikely that QEMU would be used as the VMM for
> these deployments. We want to work out what sort of common facilities
> hypervisors need to support to enable virtio so the daemons can be
> re-usable and maybe setup with a minimal shim for the particular
> hypervisor in question.

The vhost-user protocol together with the backend program conventions
define the wire protocol and command-line interface (see
docs/interop/vhost-user.rst).

vhost-user is already used by other VMMs today. For example,
cloud-hypervisor implements vhost-user.

I'm sure there is room for improvement, but it seems like an incremental
step given that vhost-user already tries to cater for this scenario.

Are there any specific gaps you have identified?

Stefan

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