Message ID | 20241024165627.1372621-3-peterx@redhat.com (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New |
Headers | show |
Series | QOM: Singleton interface | expand |
Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> writes: > X86 IOMMUs cannot be created more than one on a system yet. Make it a > singleton so it guards the system from accidentally create yet another > IOMMU object when one already presents. > > Now if someone tries to create more than one, e.g., via: > > ./qemu -M q35 -device intel-iommu -device intel-iommu > > The error will change from: > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: QEMU does not support multiple vIOMMUs for x86 yet. > > To: > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: Class 'intel-iommu' only supports one instance > > Unfortunately, yet we can't remove the singleton check in the machine > hook (pc_machine_device_pre_plug_cb), because there can also be > virtio-iommu involved, which doesn't share a common parent class yet. > > But with this, it should be closer to reach that goal to check singleton by > QOM one day. > > Signed-off-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> $ qemu-system-x86_64 -device amd-iommu,help /work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h:24:MACHINE: Object 0x56473906f960 is not an instance of type machine Aborted (core dumped) (gdb) bt #0 0x00007ffff4e43834 in __pthread_kill_implementation () at /lib64/libc.so.6 #1 0x00007ffff4df18ee in raise () at /lib64/libc.so.6 #2 0x00007ffff4dd98ff in abort () at /lib64/libc.so.6 #3 0x0000555555f75ef3 in object_dynamic_cast_assert (obj=0x555557e03960, typename=0x5555563c403e "machine", file=0x5555563c4018 "/work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h", line=24, func=0x5555563c4290 <__func__.7> "MACHINE") at ../qom/object.c:936 #4 0x0000555555d5db0f in MACHINE (obj=0x555557e03960) at /work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h:24 #5 0x0000555555d5e030 in x86_iommu_get_default () at ../hw/i386/x86-iommu.c:83 #6 0x0000555555d5e262 in x86_iommu_get_instance (errp=0x5555573d4918 <error_abort>) at ../hw/i386/x86-iommu.c:139 #7 0x0000555555f7c27c in singleton_get_instance (class=0x555557e00320) at ../qom/object_interfaces.c:371 #8 0x000055555612a842 in qmp_device_list_properties (typename=0x555557e001d0 "amd-iommu", errp=0x7fffffffda38) at ../qom/qom-qmp-cmds.c:147 #9 0x0000555555bf20b2 in qdev_device_help (opts=0x555557e001f0) at ../system/qdev-monitor.c:314 #10 0x0000555555bfe06d in device_help_func (opaque=0x0, opts=0x555557e001f0, errp=0x0) at ../system/vl.c:1208 #11 0x0000555556217186 in qemu_opts_foreach (list=0x55555729e5c0 <qemu_device_opts>, func=0x555555bfe04d <device_help_func>, opaque=0x0, errp=0x0) at ../util/qemu-option.c:1135 #12 0x0000555555c01d56 in qemu_process_help_options () at ../system/vl.c:2555 #13 0x0000555555c04d81 in qemu_init (argc=3, argv=0x7fffffffde28) at ../system/vl.c:3654 #14 0x000055555612ffae in main (argc=3, argv=0x7fffffffde28) at ../system/main.c:47
On Fri, Oct 25, 2024 at 11:25:23AM +0200, Markus Armbruster wrote: > Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> writes: > > > X86 IOMMUs cannot be created more than one on a system yet. Make it a > > singleton so it guards the system from accidentally create yet another > > IOMMU object when one already presents. > > > > Now if someone tries to create more than one, e.g., via: > > > > ./qemu -M q35 -device intel-iommu -device intel-iommu > > > > The error will change from: > > > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: QEMU does not support multiple vIOMMUs for x86 yet. > > > > To: > > > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: Class 'intel-iommu' only supports one instance > > > > Unfortunately, yet we can't remove the singleton check in the machine > > hook (pc_machine_device_pre_plug_cb), because there can also be > > virtio-iommu involved, which doesn't share a common parent class yet. > > > > But with this, it should be closer to reach that goal to check singleton by > > QOM one day. > > > > Signed-off-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> > > $ qemu-system-x86_64 -device amd-iommu,help > /work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h:24:MACHINE: Object 0x56473906f960 is not an instance of type machine > Aborted (core dumped) > > (gdb) bt > #0 0x00007ffff4e43834 in __pthread_kill_implementation () at /lib64/libc.so.6 > #1 0x00007ffff4df18ee in raise () at /lib64/libc.so.6 > #2 0x00007ffff4dd98ff in abort () at /lib64/libc.so.6 > #3 0x0000555555f75ef3 in object_dynamic_cast_assert > (obj=0x555557e03960, typename=0x5555563c403e "machine", file=0x5555563c4018 "/work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h", line=24, func=0x5555563c4290 <__func__.7> "MACHINE") at ../qom/object.c:936 > #4 0x0000555555d5db0f in MACHINE (obj=0x555557e03960) > at /work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h:24 > #5 0x0000555555d5e030 in x86_iommu_get_default () at ../hw/i386/x86-iommu.c:83 > #6 0x0000555555d5e262 in x86_iommu_get_instance > (errp=0x5555573d4918 <error_abort>) at ../hw/i386/x86-iommu.c:139 > #7 0x0000555555f7c27c in singleton_get_instance (class=0x555557e00320) > at ../qom/object_interfaces.c:371 > #8 0x000055555612a842 in qmp_device_list_properties > (typename=0x555557e001d0 "amd-iommu", errp=0x7fffffffda38) > at ../qom/qom-qmp-cmds.c:147 > #9 0x0000555555bf20b2 in qdev_device_help (opts=0x555557e001f0) > at ../system/qdev-monitor.c:314 > #10 0x0000555555bfe06d in device_help_func > (opaque=0x0, opts=0x555557e001f0, errp=0x0) at ../system/vl.c:1208 > #11 0x0000555556217186 in qemu_opts_foreach > (list=0x55555729e5c0 <qemu_device_opts>, func=0x555555bfe04d <device_help_func>, opaque=0x0, errp=0x0) at ../util/qemu-option.c:1135 > #12 0x0000555555c01d56 in qemu_process_help_options () at ../system/vl.c:2555 > #13 0x0000555555c04d81 in qemu_init (argc=3, argv=0x7fffffffde28) > at ../system/vl.c:3654 > #14 0x000055555612ffae in main (argc=3, argv=0x7fffffffde28) > at ../system/main.c:47 > Thanks for the report! It turns out that qdev_get_machine() cannot be invoked too early, and the singleton code can make it earlier.. We may want a pre-requisite patch to allow qdev_get_machine() to be invoked anytime, like: ===8<=== diff --git a/hw/core/qdev.c b/hw/core/qdev.c index db36f54d91..7ceae47139 100644 --- a/hw/core/qdev.c +++ b/hw/core/qdev.c @@ -831,6 +831,16 @@ Object *qdev_get_machine(void) { static Object *dev; + if (!phase_check(PHASE_MACHINE_CREATED)) { + /* + * When the machine is not created, below can wrongly create + * /machine to be a container.. this enables qdev_get_machine() to + * be used at any time and return NULL properly when machine is not + * created. + */ + return NULL; + } + if (dev == NULL) { dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); } ===8<=== I hope it makes sense on its own. Then callers who can be invoked earlier could then handle NULL properly, in this case.. ===8<=== diff --git a/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c b/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c index 4bfeb08705..fceb7adfe0 100644 --- a/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c +++ b/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c @@ -80,9 +80,15 @@ void x86_iommu_irq_to_msi_message(X86IOMMUIrq *irq, MSIMessage *msg_out) X86IOMMUState *x86_iommu_get_default(void) { - MachineState *ms = MACHINE(qdev_get_machine()); - PCMachineState *pcms = - PC_MACHINE(object_dynamic_cast(OBJECT(ms), TYPE_PC_MACHINE)); + Object *machine = qdev_get_machine(); + PCMachineState *pcms; + + /* If machine has not been created, so is the vIOMMU */ + if (!machine) { + return NULL; + } + + pcms = PC_MACHINE(object_dynamic_cast(machine, TYPE_PC_MACHINE)); if (pcms && object_dynamic_cast(OBJECT(pcms->iommu), TYPE_X86_IOMMU_DEVICE)) { ===8<=== I'll make sure this works if I'll repost. Thanks,
On Fri, Oct 25, 2024 at 05:55:59PM -0400, Peter Xu wrote: > On Fri, Oct 25, 2024 at 11:25:23AM +0200, Markus Armbruster wrote: > > Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> writes: > > > > > X86 IOMMUs cannot be created more than one on a system yet. Make it a > > > singleton so it guards the system from accidentally create yet another > > > IOMMU object when one already presents. > > > > > > Now if someone tries to create more than one, e.g., via: > > > > > > ./qemu -M q35 -device intel-iommu -device intel-iommu > > > > > > The error will change from: > > > > > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: QEMU does not support multiple vIOMMUs for x86 yet. > > > > > > To: > > > > > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: Class 'intel-iommu' only supports one instance > > > > > > Unfortunately, yet we can't remove the singleton check in the machine > > > hook (pc_machine_device_pre_plug_cb), because there can also be > > > virtio-iommu involved, which doesn't share a common parent class yet. > > > > > > But with this, it should be closer to reach that goal to check singleton by > > > QOM one day. > > > > > > Signed-off-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> > > > > $ qemu-system-x86_64 -device amd-iommu,help > > /work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h:24:MACHINE: Object 0x56473906f960 is not an instance of type machine > > Aborted (core dumped) > > > > (gdb) bt > > #0 0x00007ffff4e43834 in __pthread_kill_implementation () at /lib64/libc.so.6 > > #1 0x00007ffff4df18ee in raise () at /lib64/libc.so.6 > > #2 0x00007ffff4dd98ff in abort () at /lib64/libc.so.6 > > #3 0x0000555555f75ef3 in object_dynamic_cast_assert > > (obj=0x555557e03960, typename=0x5555563c403e "machine", file=0x5555563c4018 "/work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h", line=24, func=0x5555563c4290 <__func__.7> "MACHINE") at ../qom/object.c:936 > > #4 0x0000555555d5db0f in MACHINE (obj=0x555557e03960) > > at /work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h:24 > > #5 0x0000555555d5e030 in x86_iommu_get_default () at ../hw/i386/x86-iommu.c:83 > > #6 0x0000555555d5e262 in x86_iommu_get_instance > > (errp=0x5555573d4918 <error_abort>) at ../hw/i386/x86-iommu.c:139 > > #7 0x0000555555f7c27c in singleton_get_instance (class=0x555557e00320) > > at ../qom/object_interfaces.c:371 > > #8 0x000055555612a842 in qmp_device_list_properties > > (typename=0x555557e001d0 "amd-iommu", errp=0x7fffffffda38) > > at ../qom/qom-qmp-cmds.c:147 > > #9 0x0000555555bf20b2 in qdev_device_help (opts=0x555557e001f0) > > at ../system/qdev-monitor.c:314 > > #10 0x0000555555bfe06d in device_help_func > > (opaque=0x0, opts=0x555557e001f0, errp=0x0) at ../system/vl.c:1208 > > #11 0x0000555556217186 in qemu_opts_foreach > > (list=0x55555729e5c0 <qemu_device_opts>, func=0x555555bfe04d <device_help_func>, opaque=0x0, errp=0x0) at ../util/qemu-option.c:1135 > > #12 0x0000555555c01d56 in qemu_process_help_options () at ../system/vl.c:2555 > > #13 0x0000555555c04d81 in qemu_init (argc=3, argv=0x7fffffffde28) > > at ../system/vl.c:3654 > > #14 0x000055555612ffae in main (argc=3, argv=0x7fffffffde28) > > at ../system/main.c:47 > > > > Thanks for the report! > > It turns out that qdev_get_machine() cannot be invoked too early, and the > singleton code can make it earlier.. > > We may want a pre-requisite patch to allow qdev_get_machine() to be invoked > anytime, like: > > ===8<=== > diff --git a/hw/core/qdev.c b/hw/core/qdev.c > index db36f54d91..7ceae47139 100644 > --- a/hw/core/qdev.c > +++ b/hw/core/qdev.c > @@ -831,6 +831,16 @@ Object *qdev_get_machine(void) > { > static Object *dev; > > + if (!phase_check(PHASE_MACHINE_CREATED)) { > + /* > + * When the machine is not created, below can wrongly create > + * /machine to be a container.. this enables qdev_get_machine() to > + * be used at any time and return NULL properly when machine is not > + * created. > + */ > + return NULL; > + } > + > if (dev == NULL) { > dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); > } > ===8<=== > > I hope it makes sense on its own. My apologies, spoke too soon here. This helper is used too after machine is created, but right before switching to PHASE_MACHINE_CREATE stage.. So we need another way, like: ===8<=== diff --git a/hw/core/qdev.c b/hw/core/qdev.c index db36f54d91..36a9fdb428 100644 --- a/hw/core/qdev.c +++ b/hw/core/qdev.c @@ -832,7 +832,13 @@ Object *qdev_get_machine(void) static Object *dev; if (dev == NULL) { - dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); + /* + * NOTE: dev can keep being NULL if machine is not yet created! + * In which case the function will properly return NULL. + * + * Whenever machine object is created and found once, we cache it. + */ + dev = object_resolve_path_component(object_get_root(), "machine"); } return dev; ===8<=== The idea is still the same. Meanwhile I'll test more to see whether it has other issues. Thanks, > Then callers who can be invoked earlier > could then handle NULL properly, in this case.. > > ===8<=== > diff --git a/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c b/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c > index 4bfeb08705..fceb7adfe0 100644 > --- a/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c > +++ b/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c > @@ -80,9 +80,15 @@ void x86_iommu_irq_to_msi_message(X86IOMMUIrq *irq, MSIMessage *msg_out) > > X86IOMMUState *x86_iommu_get_default(void) > { > - MachineState *ms = MACHINE(qdev_get_machine()); > - PCMachineState *pcms = > - PC_MACHINE(object_dynamic_cast(OBJECT(ms), TYPE_PC_MACHINE)); > + Object *machine = qdev_get_machine(); > + PCMachineState *pcms; > + > + /* If machine has not been created, so is the vIOMMU */ > + if (!machine) { > + return NULL; > + } > + > + pcms = PC_MACHINE(object_dynamic_cast(machine, TYPE_PC_MACHINE)); > > if (pcms && > object_dynamic_cast(OBJECT(pcms->iommu), TYPE_X86_IOMMU_DEVICE)) { > ===8<=== > > I'll make sure this works if I'll repost. > > Thanks, > > -- > Peter Xu
On Thu, Oct 24, 2024 at 12:56:25PM -0400, Peter Xu wrote: > X86 IOMMUs cannot be created more than one on a system yet. Make it a > singleton so it guards the system from accidentally create yet another > IOMMU object when one already presents. > > Now if someone tries to create more than one, e.g., via: > > ./qemu -M q35 -device intel-iommu -device intel-iommu > > The error will change from: > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: QEMU does not support multiple vIOMMUs for x86 yet. > > To: > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: Class 'intel-iommu' only supports one instance > > Unfortunately, yet we can't remove the singleton check in the machine > hook (pc_machine_device_pre_plug_cb), because there can also be > virtio-iommu involved, which doesn't share a common parent class yet. Presumably the 'class' reported is the one that the user requested, but this would imply if we were to do qemu-system-x86_64 -device intel-iommu -device virtio-iommu Then QEMU would report "Class 'virtio-iommu' only supports one instance" at which point the user is wondering, huh, I only requested one virtio-iommu instance ? IOW, the current error message would be better as it is not referring to a specific subclass, but rather to the more general fact that only a single IOMMU is permitted, no matter what it's impl is. > > But with this, it should be closer to reach that goal to check singleton by > QOM one day. > > Signed-off-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> > --- > hw/i386/x86-iommu.c | 14 ++++++++++++++ > 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c b/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c > index 60af896225..4bfeb08705 100644 > --- a/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c > +++ b/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c > @@ -26,6 +26,7 @@ > #include "qemu/error-report.h" > #include "trace.h" > #include "sysemu/kvm.h" > +#include "qom/object_interfaces.h" > > void x86_iommu_iec_register_notifier(X86IOMMUState *iommu, > iec_notify_fn fn, void *data) > @@ -133,10 +134,19 @@ static Property x86_iommu_properties[] = { > DEFINE_PROP_END_OF_LIST(), > }; > > +static Object *x86_iommu_get_instance(Error **errp) > +{ > + return OBJECT(x86_iommu_get_default()); > +} > + > static void x86_iommu_class_init(ObjectClass *klass, void *data) > { > DeviceClass *dc = DEVICE_CLASS(klass); > + SingletonClass *singleton = SINGLETON_CLASS(klass); > + > dc->realize = x86_iommu_realize; > + singleton->get_instance = x86_iommu_get_instance; > + > device_class_set_props(dc, x86_iommu_properties); > } > > @@ -152,6 +162,10 @@ static const TypeInfo x86_iommu_info = { > .class_init = x86_iommu_class_init, > .class_size = sizeof(X86IOMMUClass), > .abstract = true, > + .interfaces = (InterfaceInfo[]) { > + { TYPE_SINGLETON }, > + { } > + } > }; > > static void x86_iommu_register_types(void) > -- > 2.45.0 > With regards, Daniel
On Tue, Oct 29, 2024 at 10:47:06AM +0000, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote: > On Thu, Oct 24, 2024 at 12:56:25PM -0400, Peter Xu wrote: > > X86 IOMMUs cannot be created more than one on a system yet. Make it a > > singleton so it guards the system from accidentally create yet another > > IOMMU object when one already presents. > > > > Now if someone tries to create more than one, e.g., via: > > > > ./qemu -M q35 -device intel-iommu -device intel-iommu > > > > The error will change from: > > > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: QEMU does not support multiple vIOMMUs for x86 yet. > > > > To: > > > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: Class 'intel-iommu' only supports one instance > > > > Unfortunately, yet we can't remove the singleton check in the machine > > hook (pc_machine_device_pre_plug_cb), because there can also be > > virtio-iommu involved, which doesn't share a common parent class yet. > > Presumably the 'class' reported is the one that the user requested, > but this would imply if we were to do > > qemu-system-x86_64 -device intel-iommu -device virtio-iommu > > Then QEMU would report > > "Class 'virtio-iommu' only supports one instance" > > at which point the user is wondering, huh, I only requested one virtio-iommu > instance ? > > IOW, the current error message would be better as it is not referring to a > specific subclass, but rather to the more general fact that only a single > IOMMU is permitted, no matter what it's impl is. True.. though IIUC this is more or less a cosmetic change only. E.g., if we want (assuming after we could have object_new_allowed(Error **errp), checking both abstract + singleton classes) we could make the error points to the base class (rather than the top class to be initiated) that declared TYPE_SINGLETON when it failed due to the singleton check. One step further, we can even provide a custom Error for any singleton class to say whatever it wants if it hits a duplicate. So to me it's a separate issue from whether we would like to have a generic way to define a singleton class. I am still ok if we want to avoid introducing the singleton, but just to mention I believe it can report something similar as before if we want. Thanks,
Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> writes: > On Fri, Oct 25, 2024 at 05:55:59PM -0400, Peter Xu wrote: >> On Fri, Oct 25, 2024 at 11:25:23AM +0200, Markus Armbruster wrote: >> > Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> writes: >> > >> > > X86 IOMMUs cannot be created more than one on a system yet. Make it a >> > > singleton so it guards the system from accidentally create yet another >> > > IOMMU object when one already presents. >> > > >> > > Now if someone tries to create more than one, e.g., via: >> > > >> > > ./qemu -M q35 -device intel-iommu -device intel-iommu >> > > >> > > The error will change from: >> > > >> > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: QEMU does not support multiple vIOMMUs for x86 yet. >> > > >> > > To: >> > > >> > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: Class 'intel-iommu' only supports one instance >> > > >> > > Unfortunately, yet we can't remove the singleton check in the machine >> > > hook (pc_machine_device_pre_plug_cb), because there can also be >> > > virtio-iommu involved, which doesn't share a common parent class yet. >> > > >> > > But with this, it should be closer to reach that goal to check singleton by >> > > QOM one day. >> > > >> > > Signed-off-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> >> > >> > $ qemu-system-x86_64 -device amd-iommu,help >> > /work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h:24:MACHINE: Object 0x56473906f960 is not an instance of type machine >> > Aborted (core dumped) [...] >> Thanks for the report! >> >> It turns out that qdev_get_machine() cannot be invoked too early, and the >> singleton code can make it earlier.. >> >> We may want a pre-requisite patch to allow qdev_get_machine() to be invoked >> anytime, like: >> >> ===8<=== >> diff --git a/hw/core/qdev.c b/hw/core/qdev.c >> index db36f54d91..7ceae47139 100644 >> --- a/hw/core/qdev.c >> +++ b/hw/core/qdev.c >> @@ -831,6 +831,16 @@ Object *qdev_get_machine(void) >> { >> static Object *dev; >> >> + if (!phase_check(PHASE_MACHINE_CREATED)) { >> + /* >> + * When the machine is not created, below can wrongly create >> + * /machine to be a container.. this enables qdev_get_machine() to >> + * be used at any time and return NULL properly when machine is not >> + * created. >> + */ >> + return NULL; >> + } >> + >> if (dev == NULL) { >> dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); >> } >> ===8<=== >> >> I hope it makes sense on its own. > > My apologies, spoke too soon here. This helper is used too after machine > is created, but right before switching to PHASE_MACHINE_CREATE stage.. container_get() is a trap. When the object to be gotten is always "container", it merely complicates container creation: it's implicitly created on first get. Which of the calls creates may be less than obvious. When the object to be gotten is something else, such as a machine, container_get() before creation is *wrong*, and will lead to trouble later. In my opinion: * Hiding creation in getters is a bad idea unless creation has no material side effects. * Getting anything but a container with container_get() is in bad taste. > So we need another way, like: > > ===8<=== > > diff --git a/hw/core/qdev.c b/hw/core/qdev.c > index db36f54d91..36a9fdb428 100644 > --- a/hw/core/qdev.c > +++ b/hw/core/qdev.c > @@ -832,7 +832,13 @@ Object *qdev_get_machine(void) > static Object *dev; > > if (dev == NULL) { > - dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); > + /* > + * NOTE: dev can keep being NULL if machine is not yet created! > + * In which case the function will properly return NULL. > + * > + * Whenever machine object is created and found once, we cache it. > + */ > + dev = object_resolve_path_component(object_get_root(), "machine"); > } > > return dev; Now returns null instead of a bogus container when called before machine creation. Improvement of sorts. But none of the callers expect null... shouldn't we assert(dev) here? Hmm, below you add a caller that checks for null. Another nice mess. > ===8<=== > > The idea is still the same. Meanwhile I'll test more to see whether it has > other issues. > > Thanks, > >> Then callers who can be invoked earlier >> could then handle NULL properly, in this case.. >> >> ===8<=== >> diff --git a/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c b/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c >> index 4bfeb08705..fceb7adfe0 100644 >> --- a/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c >> +++ b/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c >> @@ -80,9 +80,15 @@ void x86_iommu_irq_to_msi_message(X86IOMMUIrq *irq, MSIMessage *msg_out) >> >> X86IOMMUState *x86_iommu_get_default(void) >> { >> - MachineState *ms = MACHINE(qdev_get_machine()); >> - PCMachineState *pcms = >> - PC_MACHINE(object_dynamic_cast(OBJECT(ms), TYPE_PC_MACHINE)); >> + Object *machine = qdev_get_machine(); >> + PCMachineState *pcms; >> + >> + /* If machine has not been created, so is the vIOMMU */ >> + if (!machine) { >> + return NULL; >> + } >> + >> + pcms = PC_MACHINE(object_dynamic_cast(machine, TYPE_PC_MACHINE)); >> >> if (pcms && >> object_dynamic_cast(OBJECT(pcms->iommu), TYPE_X86_IOMMU_DEVICE)) { >> ===8<=== >> >> I'll make sure this works if I'll repost. >> >> Thanks, >> >> -- >> Peter Xu
On Thu, Nov 07, 2024 at 12:12:10PM +0100, Markus Armbruster wrote: > Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> writes: > > > On Fri, Oct 25, 2024 at 05:55:59PM -0400, Peter Xu wrote: > >> On Fri, Oct 25, 2024 at 11:25:23AM +0200, Markus Armbruster wrote: > >> > Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> writes: > >> > > >> > > X86 IOMMUs cannot be created more than one on a system yet. Make it a > >> > > singleton so it guards the system from accidentally create yet another > >> > > IOMMU object when one already presents. > >> > > > >> > > Now if someone tries to create more than one, e.g., via: > >> > > > >> > > ./qemu -M q35 -device intel-iommu -device intel-iommu > >> > > > >> > > The error will change from: > >> > > > >> > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: QEMU does not support multiple vIOMMUs for x86 yet. > >> > > > >> > > To: > >> > > > >> > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: Class 'intel-iommu' only supports one instance > >> > > > >> > > Unfortunately, yet we can't remove the singleton check in the machine > >> > > hook (pc_machine_device_pre_plug_cb), because there can also be > >> > > virtio-iommu involved, which doesn't share a common parent class yet. > >> > > > >> > > But with this, it should be closer to reach that goal to check singleton by > >> > > QOM one day. > >> > > > >> > > Signed-off-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> > >> > > >> > $ qemu-system-x86_64 -device amd-iommu,help > >> > /work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h:24:MACHINE: Object 0x56473906f960 is not an instance of type machine > >> > Aborted (core dumped) > > [...] > > >> Thanks for the report! > >> > >> It turns out that qdev_get_machine() cannot be invoked too early, and the > >> singleton code can make it earlier.. > >> > >> We may want a pre-requisite patch to allow qdev_get_machine() to be invoked > >> anytime, like: > >> > >> ===8<=== > >> diff --git a/hw/core/qdev.c b/hw/core/qdev.c > >> index db36f54d91..7ceae47139 100644 > >> --- a/hw/core/qdev.c > >> +++ b/hw/core/qdev.c > >> @@ -831,6 +831,16 @@ Object *qdev_get_machine(void) > >> { > >> static Object *dev; > >> > >> + if (!phase_check(PHASE_MACHINE_CREATED)) { > >> + /* > >> + * When the machine is not created, below can wrongly create > >> + * /machine to be a container.. this enables qdev_get_machine() to > >> + * be used at any time and return NULL properly when machine is not > >> + * created. > >> + */ > >> + return NULL; > >> + } > >> + > >> if (dev == NULL) { > >> dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); > >> } > >> ===8<=== > >> > >> I hope it makes sense on its own. > > > > My apologies, spoke too soon here. This helper is used too after machine > > is created, but right before switching to PHASE_MACHINE_CREATE stage.. > > container_get() is a trap. I had the same feeling.. Though I'd confess I'm not familiar enough with this part of code. > > When the object to be gotten is always "container", it merely > complicates container creation: it's implicitly created on first get. > Which of the calls creates may be less than obvious. > > When the object to be gotten is something else, such as a machine, > container_get() before creation is *wrong*, and will lead to trouble > later. > > In my opinion: > > * Hiding creation in getters is a bad idea unless creation has no > material side effects. > > * Getting anything but a container with container_get() is in bad taste. Agreed. IMHO container_get() interface might still be ok to implicitly create containers, but only if it will: (1) always make sure what it walks is a container along the way, and (2) never return any non-container. > > > > So we need another way, like: > > > > ===8<=== > > > > diff --git a/hw/core/qdev.c b/hw/core/qdev.c > > index db36f54d91..36a9fdb428 100644 > > --- a/hw/core/qdev.c > > +++ b/hw/core/qdev.c > > @@ -832,7 +832,13 @@ Object *qdev_get_machine(void) > > static Object *dev; > > > > if (dev == NULL) { > > - dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); > > + /* > > + * NOTE: dev can keep being NULL if machine is not yet created! > > + * In which case the function will properly return NULL. > > + * > > + * Whenever machine object is created and found once, we cache it. > > + */ > > + dev = object_resolve_path_component(object_get_root(), "machine"); > > } > > > > return dev; > > Now returns null instead of a bogus container when called before machine > creation. Improvement of sorts. But none of the callers expect null... > shouldn't we assert(dev) here? > > Hmm, below you add a caller that checks for null. > > Another nice mess. I plan to put aside the application of singletons to x86-iommu as of now, due to the fact that qdev complexity may better be done separately. IOW, before that, I wonder whether we should clean up the container_get() as you discussed: it doesn't sound like a good interface to return non-container objects. I had a quick look, I only see two outliers of such, and besides the "abuse" in qdev_get_machine(), the only other one is e500_pcihost_bridge_realize(): *** hw/core/qdev.c: qdev_get_machine[820] dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); *** hw/pci-host/ppce500.c: e500_pcihost_bridge_realize[422] PPCE500CCSRState *ccsr = CCSR(container_get(qdev_get_machine(), If any of us thinks this is the right way to go, I can try to clean it up (for 10.0). qdev_get_machine() may still need to be able to return NULL when singleton applies to IOMMUs, but that can be for later. Before that, we can still assert(qdev), I think. Just to mention I've posted rfcv2 for this series, again feel free to ignore patch 3-5 as of now: [PATCH RFC v2 0/7] QOM: Singleton interface https://lore.kernel.org/r/20241029211607.2114845-1-peterx@redhat.com I think the plan is Dan may keep collecting feedbacks on his other rfc: [RFC 0/5] RFC: require error handling for dynamically created objects https://lore.kernel.org/r/20241031155350.3240361-1-berrange@redhat.com Then after Dan's lands, I'll rebase my rfcv2 on top of his, dropping iommu/qdev changes. Thanks,
Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> writes: > On Thu, Nov 07, 2024 at 12:12:10PM +0100, Markus Armbruster wrote: >> Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> writes: >> >> > On Fri, Oct 25, 2024 at 05:55:59PM -0400, Peter Xu wrote: >> >> On Fri, Oct 25, 2024 at 11:25:23AM +0200, Markus Armbruster wrote: >> >> > Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> writes: >> >> > >> >> > > X86 IOMMUs cannot be created more than one on a system yet. Make it a >> >> > > singleton so it guards the system from accidentally create yet another >> >> > > IOMMU object when one already presents. >> >> > > >> >> > > Now if someone tries to create more than one, e.g., via: >> >> > > >> >> > > ./qemu -M q35 -device intel-iommu -device intel-iommu >> >> > > >> >> > > The error will change from: >> >> > > >> >> > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: QEMU does not support multiple vIOMMUs for x86 yet. >> >> > > >> >> > > To: >> >> > > >> >> > > qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: Class 'intel-iommu' only supports one instance >> >> > > >> >> > > Unfortunately, yet we can't remove the singleton check in the machine >> >> > > hook (pc_machine_device_pre_plug_cb), because there can also be >> >> > > virtio-iommu involved, which doesn't share a common parent class yet. >> >> > > >> >> > > But with this, it should be closer to reach that goal to check singleton by >> >> > > QOM one day. >> >> > > >> >> > > Signed-off-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> >> >> > >> >> > $ qemu-system-x86_64 -device amd-iommu,help >> >> > /work/armbru/qemu/include/hw/boards.h:24:MACHINE: Object 0x56473906f960 is not an instance of type machine >> >> > Aborted (core dumped) >> >> [...] >> >> >> Thanks for the report! >> >> >> >> It turns out that qdev_get_machine() cannot be invoked too early, and the >> >> singleton code can make it earlier.. >> >> >> >> We may want a pre-requisite patch to allow qdev_get_machine() to be invoked >> >> anytime, like: >> >> >> >> ===8<=== >> >> diff --git a/hw/core/qdev.c b/hw/core/qdev.c >> >> index db36f54d91..7ceae47139 100644 >> >> --- a/hw/core/qdev.c >> >> +++ b/hw/core/qdev.c >> >> @@ -831,6 +831,16 @@ Object *qdev_get_machine(void) >> >> { >> >> static Object *dev; >> >> >> >> + if (!phase_check(PHASE_MACHINE_CREATED)) { >> >> + /* >> >> + * When the machine is not created, below can wrongly create >> >> + * /machine to be a container.. this enables qdev_get_machine() to >> >> + * be used at any time and return NULL properly when machine is not >> >> + * created. >> >> + */ >> >> + return NULL; >> >> + } >> >> + >> >> if (dev == NULL) { >> >> dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); >> >> } >> >> ===8<=== >> >> >> >> I hope it makes sense on its own. >> > >> > My apologies, spoke too soon here. This helper is used too after machine >> > is created, but right before switching to PHASE_MACHINE_CREATE stage.. >> >> container_get() is a trap. > > I had the same feeling.. Though I'd confess I'm not familiar enough with > this part of code. > >> >> When the object to be gotten is always "container", it merely >> complicates container creation: it's implicitly created on first get. >> Which of the calls creates may be less than obvious. >> >> When the object to be gotten is something else, such as a machine, >> container_get() before creation is *wrong*, and will lead to trouble >> later. >> >> In my opinion: >> >> * Hiding creation in getters is a bad idea unless creation has no >> material side effects. >> >> * Getting anything but a container with container_get() is in bad taste. > > Agreed. > > IMHO container_get() interface might still be ok to implicitly create > containers, Creation on demand is fine when we want to create the thing only when there is demand. I guess it can also be okay when we want to create it always, but don't want to decide when exactly (must be before first use), although I suspect that's just lazy more often than not. > but only if it will: (1) always make sure what it walks is a > container along the way, and (2) never return any non-container. Yes. Anything else invites abuse. >> > So we need another way, like: >> > >> > ===8<=== >> > >> > diff --git a/hw/core/qdev.c b/hw/core/qdev.c >> > index db36f54d91..36a9fdb428 100644 >> > --- a/hw/core/qdev.c >> > +++ b/hw/core/qdev.c >> > @@ -832,7 +832,13 @@ Object *qdev_get_machine(void) >> > static Object *dev; >> > >> > if (dev == NULL) { >> > - dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); >> > + /* >> > + * NOTE: dev can keep being NULL if machine is not yet created! >> > + * In which case the function will properly return NULL. >> > + * >> > + * Whenever machine object is created and found once, we cache it. >> > + */ >> > + dev = object_resolve_path_component(object_get_root(), "machine"); >> > } >> > >> > return dev; >> >> Now returns null instead of a bogus container when called before machine >> creation. Improvement of sorts. But none of the callers expect null... >> shouldn't we assert(dev) here? >> >> Hmm, below you add a caller that checks for null. >> >> Another nice mess. > > I plan to put aside the application of singletons to x86-iommu as of now, > due to the fact that qdev complexity may better be done separately. > > IOW, before that, I wonder whether we should clean up the container_get() > as you discussed: it doesn't sound like a good interface to return > non-container objects. > > I had a quick look, I only see two outliers of such, and besides the > "abuse" in qdev_get_machine(), the only other one is > e500_pcihost_bridge_realize(): > > *** hw/core/qdev.c: > qdev_get_machine[820] dev = container_get(object_get_root(), "/machine"); > > *** hw/pci-host/ppce500.c: > e500_pcihost_bridge_realize[422] PPCE500CCSRState *ccsr = CCSR(container_get(qdev_get_machine(), "/e500-ccsr")); Yes, this abuses container_get() to get an "e500-ccsr", which is a device, not a container. By the way, intentation is confusing here. > If any of us thinks this is the right way to go, I can try to clean it up > (for 10.0). qdev_get_machine() may still need to be able to return NULL > when singleton applies to IOMMUs, but that can be for later. Before that, > we can still assert(qdev), I think. I think it's worthwhile. > Just to mention I've posted rfcv2 for this series, again feel free to > ignore patch 3-5 as of now: > > [PATCH RFC v2 0/7] QOM: Singleton interface > https://lore.kernel.org/r/20241029211607.2114845-1-peterx@redhat.com > > I think the plan is Dan may keep collecting feedbacks on his other rfc: > > [RFC 0/5] RFC: require error handling for dynamically created objects > https://lore.kernel.org/r/20241031155350.3240361-1-berrange@redhat.com > > Then after Dan's lands, I'll rebase my rfcv2 on top of his, dropping > iommu/qdev changes. > > Thanks, Makes sense. Thanks!
diff --git a/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c b/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c index 60af896225..4bfeb08705 100644 --- a/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c +++ b/hw/i386/x86-iommu.c @@ -26,6 +26,7 @@ #include "qemu/error-report.h" #include "trace.h" #include "sysemu/kvm.h" +#include "qom/object_interfaces.h" void x86_iommu_iec_register_notifier(X86IOMMUState *iommu, iec_notify_fn fn, void *data) @@ -133,10 +134,19 @@ static Property x86_iommu_properties[] = { DEFINE_PROP_END_OF_LIST(), }; +static Object *x86_iommu_get_instance(Error **errp) +{ + return OBJECT(x86_iommu_get_default()); +} + static void x86_iommu_class_init(ObjectClass *klass, void *data) { DeviceClass *dc = DEVICE_CLASS(klass); + SingletonClass *singleton = SINGLETON_CLASS(klass); + dc->realize = x86_iommu_realize; + singleton->get_instance = x86_iommu_get_instance; + device_class_set_props(dc, x86_iommu_properties); } @@ -152,6 +162,10 @@ static const TypeInfo x86_iommu_info = { .class_init = x86_iommu_class_init, .class_size = sizeof(X86IOMMUClass), .abstract = true, + .interfaces = (InterfaceInfo[]) { + { TYPE_SINGLETON }, + { } + } }; static void x86_iommu_register_types(void)
X86 IOMMUs cannot be created more than one on a system yet. Make it a singleton so it guards the system from accidentally create yet another IOMMU object when one already presents. Now if someone tries to create more than one, e.g., via: ./qemu -M q35 -device intel-iommu -device intel-iommu The error will change from: qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: QEMU does not support multiple vIOMMUs for x86 yet. To: qemu-system-x86_64: -device intel-iommu: Class 'intel-iommu' only supports one instance Unfortunately, yet we can't remove the singleton check in the machine hook (pc_machine_device_pre_plug_cb), because there can also be virtio-iommu involved, which doesn't share a common parent class yet. But with this, it should be closer to reach that goal to check singleton by QOM one day. Signed-off-by: Peter Xu <peterx@redhat.com> --- hw/i386/x86-iommu.c | 14 ++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+)