Re: [PATCH 1/2] x86: notify hypervisor about guest entering s2idle state

From: Limonciello, Mario
Date: Wed Jun 22 2022 - 17:50:41 EST


On 6/22/2022 04:53, Grzegorz Jaszczyk wrote:
pon., 20 cze 2022 o 18:32 Limonciello, Mario
<mario.limonciello@xxxxxxx> napisał(a):

On 6/20/2022 10:43, Grzegorz Jaszczyk wrote:
czw., 16 cze 2022 o 18:58 Limonciello, Mario
<mario.limonciello@xxxxxxx> napisał(a):

On 6/16/2022 11:48, Sean Christopherson wrote:
On Wed, Jun 15, 2022, Grzegorz Jaszczyk wrote:
pt., 10 cze 2022 o 16:30 Sean Christopherson <seanjc@xxxxxxxxxx> napisał(a):
MMIO or PIO for the actual exit, there's nothing special about hypercalls. As for
enumerating to the guest that it should do something, why not add a new ACPI_LPS0_*
function? E.g. something like

static void s2idle_hypervisor_notify(void)
{
if (lps0_dsm_func_mask > 0)
acpi_sleep_run_lps0_dsm(ACPI_LPS0_EXIT_HYPERVISOR_NOTIFY
lps0_dsm_func_mask, lps0_dsm_guid);
}

Great, thank you for your suggestion! I will try this approach and
come back. Since this will be the main change in the next version,
will it be ok for you to add Suggested-by: Sean Christopherson
<seanjc@xxxxxxxxxx> tag?

If you want, but there's certainly no need to do so. But I assume you or someone
at Intel will need to get formal approval for adding another ACPI LPS0 function?
I.e. isn't there work to be done outside of the kernel before any patches can be
merged?

There are 3 different LPS0 GUIDs in use. An Intel one, an AMD (legacy)
one, and a Microsoft one. They all have their own specs, and so if this
was to be added I think all 3 need to be updated.

Yes this will not be easy to achieve I think.


As this is Linux specific hypervisor behavior, I don't know you would be
able to convince Microsoft to update theirs' either.

How about using s2idle_devops? There is a prepare() call and a
restore() call that is set for each handler. The only consumer of this
ATM I'm aware of is the amd-pmc driver, but it's done like a
notification chain so that a bunch of drivers can hook in if they need to.

Then you can have this notification path and the associated ACPI device
it calls out to be it's own driver.

Thank you for your suggestion, just to be sure that I've understand
your idea correctly:
1) it will require to extend acpi_s2idle_dev_ops about something like
hypervisor_notify() call, since existing prepare() is called from end
of acpi_s2idle_prepare_late so it is too early as it was described in
one of previous message (between acpi_s2idle_prepare_late and place
where we use hypercall there are several places where the suspend
could be canceled, otherwise we could probably try to trap on other
acpi_sleep_run_lps0_dsm occurrence from acpi_s2idle_prepare_late).


The idea for prepare() was it would be the absolute last thing before
the s2idle loop was run. You're sure that's too early? It's basically
the same thing as having a last stage new _DSM call.

What about adding a new abort() extension to acpi_s2idle_dev_ops? Then
you could catch the cancelled suspend case still and take corrective
action (if that action is different than what restore() would do).

It will be problematic since the abort/restore notification could
arrive too late and therefore the whole system will go to suspend
thinking that the guest is in desired s2ilde state. Also in this case
it would be impossible to prevent races and actually making sure that
the guest is suspended or not. We already had similar discussion with
Sean earlier in this thread why the notification have to be send just
before swait_event_exclusive(s2idle_wait_head, s2idle_state ==
S2IDLE_STATE_WAKE) and that the VMM have to have control over guest
resumption.

Nevertheless if extending acpi_s2idle_dev_ops is possible, why not
extend it about the hypervisor_notify() and use it in the same place
where the hypercall is used in this patch? Do you see any issue with
that?

If this needs to be a hypercall and the hypercall needs to go at that specific time, I wouldn't bother with extending acpi_s2idle_dev_ops. The whole idea there was that this would be less custom and could follow a spec.

TBH - given the strong dependency on being the very last command and this being all Linux specific (you won't need to do something similar with Windows) - I think the way you already did it makes the most sense.
It seems to me the ACPI device model doesn't really work well for this scenario.



2) using newly introduced acpi_s2idle_dev_ops hypervisor_notify() call
will allow to register handler from Intel x86/intel/pmc/core.c driver
and/or AMD x86/amd-pmc.c driver. Therefore we will need to get only
Intel and/or AMD approval about extending the ACPI LPS0 _DSM method,
correct?


Right now the only thing that hooks prepare()/restore() is the amd-pmc
driver (unless Intel's PMC had a change I didn't catch yet).

I don't think you should be changing any existing drivers but rather
introduce another platform driver for this specific case.

So it would be something like this:

acpi_s2idle_prepare_late
-> prepare()
--> AMD: amd_pmc handler for prepare()
--> Intel: intel_pmc handler for prepare() (conceptual)
--> HYPE0001 device: new driver's prepare() routine

So the platform driver would match the HYPE0001 device to load, and it
wouldn't do anything other than provide a prepare()/restore() handler
for your case.

You don't need to change any existing specs. If anything a new spec to
go with this new ACPI device would be made. Someone would need to
reserve the ID and such for it, but I think you can mock it up in advance.

Thank you for your explanation. This means that I should register
"HYPE" through https://nam11.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fuefi.org%2FPNP_ACPI_Registry&amp;data=05%7C01%7Cmario.limonciello%40amd.com%7C49512293908e4ee17e8c08da54351ed5%7C3dd8961fe4884e608e11a82d994e183d%7C0%7C0%7C637914884458918039%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&amp;sdata=v5VsnxAINiJhOMLpwORLHd13WcYBHf%2FGSNv8Bjhyino%3D&amp;reserved=0 before introducing
this new driver to Linux.
I have no experience with the above, so I wonder who should be
responsible for maintaining such ACPI ID since it will not belong to
any specific vendor? There is an example of e.g. COREBOOT PROJECT
using "BOOT" ACPI ID [1], which seems similar in terms of not
specifying any vendor but rather the project as a responsible entity.
Maybe you have some recommendations?

Maybe LF could own a namespace and ID? But I would suggest you make a mockup that everything works this way before you go explore too much.

Also make sure Rafael is aligned with your mockup.


I am also not sure if and where a specification describing such a
device has to be maintained. Since "HYPE0001" will have its own _DSM
so will it be required to document it somewhere rather than just using
it in the driver and preparing proper ACPI tables for guest?


I wonder if this will be affordable so just re-thinking loudly if
there is no other mechanism that could be suggested and used upstream
so we could notify hypervisor/vmm about guest entering s2idle state?
Especially that such _DSM function will be introduced only to trap on
some fake MMIO/PIO access and will be useful only for guest ACPI
tables?


Do you need to worry about Microsoft guests using Modern Standby too or
is that out of the scope of your problem set? I think you'll be a lot
more limited in how this can behave and where you can modify things if so.


I do not need to worry about Microsoft guests.

Makes life a lot easier :)


[1] https://nam11.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fuefi.org%2Facpi_id_list&amp;data=05%7C01%7Cmario.limonciello%40amd.com%7C49512293908e4ee17e8c08da54351ed5%7C3dd8961fe4884e608e11a82d994e183d%7C0%7C0%7C637914884458918039%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&amp;sdata=TXdPO%2BlCHa6v37IBsyymhGztgxZn6GEVESM%2FYI5LuUc%3D&amp;reserved=0

Thank you,
Grzegorz