qemu/tests/avocado/virtio_version.py

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virtio: Provide version-specific variants of virtio PCI devices Many of the current virtio-*-pci device types actually represent 3 different types of devices: * virtio 1.0 non-transitional devices * virtio 1.0 transitional devices * virtio 0.9 ("legacy device" in virtio 1.0 terminology) That would be just an annoyance if it didn't break our device/bus compatibility QMP interfaces. With these multi-purpose device types, there's no way to tell management software that transitional devices and legacy devices require a Conventional PCI bus. The multi-purpose device types would also prevent us from telling management software what's the PCI vendor/device ID for them, because their PCI IDs change at runtime depending on the bus where they were plugged. This patch adds separate device types for each of those virtio device flavors: - virtio-*-pci: the existing multi-purpose device types - Configurable using `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` properties - Legacy driver support is automatically enabled/disabled depending on the bus where it is plugged - Supports Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses (but Conventional PCI is incompatible with disable-legacy=off) - Changes PCI vendor/device IDs at runtime - virtio-*-pci-transitional: virtio-1.0 device supporting legacy drivers - Supports Conventional PCI buses only, because it has a PIO BAR - virtio-*-pci-non-transitional: modern-only - Supports both Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses The existing TYPE_* macros for these types will point to an abstract base type, so existing casts in the code will keep working for all variants. A simple test script (tests/acceptance/virtio_version.py) is included, to check if the new device types are equivalent to using the `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` options. Acked-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cohuck@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Eduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
2018-12-05 22:57:04 +03:00
"""
Check compatibility of virtio device types
"""
# Copyright (c) 2018 Red Hat, Inc.
#
# Author:
# Eduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com>
#
# This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or
# later. See the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
import sys
import os
from qemu.machine import QEMUMachine
from avocado_qemu import QemuSystemTest
virtio: Provide version-specific variants of virtio PCI devices Many of the current virtio-*-pci device types actually represent 3 different types of devices: * virtio 1.0 non-transitional devices * virtio 1.0 transitional devices * virtio 0.9 ("legacy device" in virtio 1.0 terminology) That would be just an annoyance if it didn't break our device/bus compatibility QMP interfaces. With these multi-purpose device types, there's no way to tell management software that transitional devices and legacy devices require a Conventional PCI bus. The multi-purpose device types would also prevent us from telling management software what's the PCI vendor/device ID for them, because their PCI IDs change at runtime depending on the bus where they were plugged. This patch adds separate device types for each of those virtio device flavors: - virtio-*-pci: the existing multi-purpose device types - Configurable using `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` properties - Legacy driver support is automatically enabled/disabled depending on the bus where it is plugged - Supports Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses (but Conventional PCI is incompatible with disable-legacy=off) - Changes PCI vendor/device IDs at runtime - virtio-*-pci-transitional: virtio-1.0 device supporting legacy drivers - Supports Conventional PCI buses only, because it has a PIO BAR - virtio-*-pci-non-transitional: modern-only - Supports both Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses The existing TYPE_* macros for these types will point to an abstract base type, so existing casts in the code will keep working for all variants. A simple test script (tests/acceptance/virtio_version.py) is included, to check if the new device types are equivalent to using the `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` options. Acked-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cohuck@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Eduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
2018-12-05 22:57:04 +03:00
# Virtio Device IDs:
VIRTIO_NET = 1
VIRTIO_BLOCK = 2
VIRTIO_CONSOLE = 3
VIRTIO_RNG = 4
VIRTIO_BALLOON = 5
VIRTIO_RPMSG = 7
VIRTIO_SCSI = 8
VIRTIO_9P = 9
VIRTIO_RPROC_SERIAL = 11
VIRTIO_CAIF = 12
VIRTIO_GPU = 16
VIRTIO_INPUT = 18
VIRTIO_VSOCK = 19
VIRTIO_CRYPTO = 20
PCI_VENDOR_ID_REDHAT_QUMRANET = 0x1af4
# Device IDs for legacy/transitional devices:
PCI_LEGACY_DEVICE_IDS = {
VIRTIO_NET: 0x1000,
VIRTIO_BLOCK: 0x1001,
VIRTIO_BALLOON: 0x1002,
VIRTIO_CONSOLE: 0x1003,
VIRTIO_SCSI: 0x1004,
VIRTIO_RNG: 0x1005,
VIRTIO_9P: 0x1009,
VIRTIO_VSOCK: 0x1012,
}
def pci_modern_device_id(virtio_devid):
return virtio_devid + 0x1040
def devtype_implements(vm, devtype, implements):
return devtype in [d['name'] for d in
vm.cmd('qom-list-types', implements=implements)]
virtio: Provide version-specific variants of virtio PCI devices Many of the current virtio-*-pci device types actually represent 3 different types of devices: * virtio 1.0 non-transitional devices * virtio 1.0 transitional devices * virtio 0.9 ("legacy device" in virtio 1.0 terminology) That would be just an annoyance if it didn't break our device/bus compatibility QMP interfaces. With these multi-purpose device types, there's no way to tell management software that transitional devices and legacy devices require a Conventional PCI bus. The multi-purpose device types would also prevent us from telling management software what's the PCI vendor/device ID for them, because their PCI IDs change at runtime depending on the bus where they were plugged. This patch adds separate device types for each of those virtio device flavors: - virtio-*-pci: the existing multi-purpose device types - Configurable using `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` properties - Legacy driver support is automatically enabled/disabled depending on the bus where it is plugged - Supports Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses (but Conventional PCI is incompatible with disable-legacy=off) - Changes PCI vendor/device IDs at runtime - virtio-*-pci-transitional: virtio-1.0 device supporting legacy drivers - Supports Conventional PCI buses only, because it has a PIO BAR - virtio-*-pci-non-transitional: modern-only - Supports both Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses The existing TYPE_* macros for these types will point to an abstract base type, so existing casts in the code will keep working for all variants. A simple test script (tests/acceptance/virtio_version.py) is included, to check if the new device types are equivalent to using the `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` options. Acked-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cohuck@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Eduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
2018-12-05 22:57:04 +03:00
def get_pci_interfaces(vm, devtype):
interfaces = ('pci-express-device', 'conventional-pci-device')
return [i for i in interfaces if devtype_implements(vm, devtype, i)]
class VirtioVersionCheck(QemuSystemTest):
virtio: Provide version-specific variants of virtio PCI devices Many of the current virtio-*-pci device types actually represent 3 different types of devices: * virtio 1.0 non-transitional devices * virtio 1.0 transitional devices * virtio 0.9 ("legacy device" in virtio 1.0 terminology) That would be just an annoyance if it didn't break our device/bus compatibility QMP interfaces. With these multi-purpose device types, there's no way to tell management software that transitional devices and legacy devices require a Conventional PCI bus. The multi-purpose device types would also prevent us from telling management software what's the PCI vendor/device ID for them, because their PCI IDs change at runtime depending on the bus where they were plugged. This patch adds separate device types for each of those virtio device flavors: - virtio-*-pci: the existing multi-purpose device types - Configurable using `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` properties - Legacy driver support is automatically enabled/disabled depending on the bus where it is plugged - Supports Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses (but Conventional PCI is incompatible with disable-legacy=off) - Changes PCI vendor/device IDs at runtime - virtio-*-pci-transitional: virtio-1.0 device supporting legacy drivers - Supports Conventional PCI buses only, because it has a PIO BAR - virtio-*-pci-non-transitional: modern-only - Supports both Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses The existing TYPE_* macros for these types will point to an abstract base type, so existing casts in the code will keep working for all variants. A simple test script (tests/acceptance/virtio_version.py) is included, to check if the new device types are equivalent to using the `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` options. Acked-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cohuck@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Eduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
2018-12-05 22:57:04 +03:00
"""
Check if virtio-version-specific device types result in the
same device tree created by `disable-modern` and
`disable-legacy`.
:avocado: tags=arch:x86_64
virtio: Provide version-specific variants of virtio PCI devices Many of the current virtio-*-pci device types actually represent 3 different types of devices: * virtio 1.0 non-transitional devices * virtio 1.0 transitional devices * virtio 0.9 ("legacy device" in virtio 1.0 terminology) That would be just an annoyance if it didn't break our device/bus compatibility QMP interfaces. With these multi-purpose device types, there's no way to tell management software that transitional devices and legacy devices require a Conventional PCI bus. The multi-purpose device types would also prevent us from telling management software what's the PCI vendor/device ID for them, because their PCI IDs change at runtime depending on the bus where they were plugged. This patch adds separate device types for each of those virtio device flavors: - virtio-*-pci: the existing multi-purpose device types - Configurable using `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` properties - Legacy driver support is automatically enabled/disabled depending on the bus where it is plugged - Supports Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses (but Conventional PCI is incompatible with disable-legacy=off) - Changes PCI vendor/device IDs at runtime - virtio-*-pci-transitional: virtio-1.0 device supporting legacy drivers - Supports Conventional PCI buses only, because it has a PIO BAR - virtio-*-pci-non-transitional: modern-only - Supports both Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses The existing TYPE_* macros for these types will point to an abstract base type, so existing casts in the code will keep working for all variants. A simple test script (tests/acceptance/virtio_version.py) is included, to check if the new device types are equivalent to using the `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` options. Acked-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cohuck@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Eduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
2018-12-05 22:57:04 +03:00
"""
# just in case there are failures, show larger diff:
maxDiff = 4096
def run_device(self, devtype, opts=None, machine='pc'):
"""
Run QEMU with `-device DEVTYPE`, return device info from `query-pci`
"""
with QEMUMachine(self.qemu_bin) as vm:
vm.set_machine(machine)
if opts:
devtype += ',' + opts
vm.add_args('-device', '%s,id=devfortest' % (devtype))
vm.add_args('-S')
vm.launch()
pcibuses = vm.cmd('query-pci')
virtio: Provide version-specific variants of virtio PCI devices Many of the current virtio-*-pci device types actually represent 3 different types of devices: * virtio 1.0 non-transitional devices * virtio 1.0 transitional devices * virtio 0.9 ("legacy device" in virtio 1.0 terminology) That would be just an annoyance if it didn't break our device/bus compatibility QMP interfaces. With these multi-purpose device types, there's no way to tell management software that transitional devices and legacy devices require a Conventional PCI bus. The multi-purpose device types would also prevent us from telling management software what's the PCI vendor/device ID for them, because their PCI IDs change at runtime depending on the bus where they were plugged. This patch adds separate device types for each of those virtio device flavors: - virtio-*-pci: the existing multi-purpose device types - Configurable using `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` properties - Legacy driver support is automatically enabled/disabled depending on the bus where it is plugged - Supports Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses (but Conventional PCI is incompatible with disable-legacy=off) - Changes PCI vendor/device IDs at runtime - virtio-*-pci-transitional: virtio-1.0 device supporting legacy drivers - Supports Conventional PCI buses only, because it has a PIO BAR - virtio-*-pci-non-transitional: modern-only - Supports both Conventional PCI and PCI Express buses The existing TYPE_* macros for these types will point to an abstract base type, so existing casts in the code will keep working for all variants. A simple test script (tests/acceptance/virtio_version.py) is included, to check if the new device types are equivalent to using the `disable-legacy` and `disable-modern` options. Acked-by: Andrea Bolognani <abologna@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Cornelia Huck <cohuck@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Eduardo Habkost <ehabkost@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst@redhat.com>
2018-12-05 22:57:04 +03:00
alldevs = [dev for bus in pcibuses for dev in bus['devices']]
devfortest = [dev for dev in alldevs
if dev['qdev_id'] == 'devfortest']
return devfortest[0], get_pci_interfaces(vm, devtype)
def assert_devids(self, dev, devid, non_transitional=False):
self.assertEqual(dev['id']['vendor'], PCI_VENDOR_ID_REDHAT_QUMRANET)
self.assertEqual(dev['id']['device'], devid)
if non_transitional:
self.assertTrue(0x1040 <= dev['id']['device'] <= 0x107f)
self.assertGreaterEqual(dev['id']['subsystem'], 0x40)
def check_all_variants(self, qemu_devtype, virtio_devid):
"""Check if a virtio device type and its variants behave as expected"""
# Force modern mode:
dev_modern, _ = self.run_device(qemu_devtype,
'disable-modern=off,disable-legacy=on')
self.assert_devids(dev_modern, pci_modern_device_id(virtio_devid),
non_transitional=True)
# <prefix>-non-transitional device types should be 100% equivalent to
# <prefix>,disable-modern=off,disable-legacy=on
dev_1_0, nt_ifaces = self.run_device('%s-non-transitional' % (qemu_devtype))
self.assertEqual(dev_modern, dev_1_0)
# Force transitional mode:
dev_trans, _ = self.run_device(qemu_devtype,
'disable-modern=off,disable-legacy=off')
self.assert_devids(dev_trans, PCI_LEGACY_DEVICE_IDS[virtio_devid])
# Force legacy mode:
dev_legacy, _ = self.run_device(qemu_devtype,
'disable-modern=on,disable-legacy=off')
self.assert_devids(dev_legacy, PCI_LEGACY_DEVICE_IDS[virtio_devid])
# No options: default to transitional on PC machine-type:
no_opts_pc, generic_ifaces = self.run_device(qemu_devtype)
self.assertEqual(dev_trans, no_opts_pc)
#TODO: check if plugging on a PCI Express bus will make the
# device non-transitional
#no_opts_q35 = self.run_device(qemu_devtype, machine='q35')
#self.assertEqual(dev_modern, no_opts_q35)
# <prefix>-transitional device types should be 100% equivalent to
# <prefix>,disable-modern=off,disable-legacy=off
dev_trans, trans_ifaces = self.run_device('%s-transitional' % (qemu_devtype))
self.assertEqual(dev_trans, dev_trans)
# ensure the interface information is correct:
self.assertIn('conventional-pci-device', generic_ifaces)
self.assertIn('pci-express-device', generic_ifaces)
self.assertIn('conventional-pci-device', nt_ifaces)
self.assertIn('pci-express-device', nt_ifaces)
self.assertIn('conventional-pci-device', trans_ifaces)
self.assertNotIn('pci-express-device', trans_ifaces)
def test_conventional_devs(self):
self.check_all_variants('virtio-net-pci', VIRTIO_NET)
# virtio-blk requires 'driver' parameter
#self.check_all_variants('virtio-blk-pci', VIRTIO_BLOCK)
self.check_all_variants('virtio-serial-pci', VIRTIO_CONSOLE)
self.check_all_variants('virtio-rng-pci', VIRTIO_RNG)
self.check_all_variants('virtio-balloon-pci', VIRTIO_BALLOON)
self.check_all_variants('virtio-scsi-pci', VIRTIO_SCSI)
# virtio-9p requires 'fsdev' parameter
#self.check_all_variants('virtio-9p-pci', VIRTIO_9P)
def check_modern_only(self, qemu_devtype, virtio_devid):
"""Check if a modern-only virtio device type behaves as expected"""
# Force modern mode:
dev_modern, _ = self.run_device(qemu_devtype,
'disable-modern=off,disable-legacy=on')
self.assert_devids(dev_modern, pci_modern_device_id(virtio_devid),
non_transitional=True)
# No options: should be modern anyway
dev_no_opts, ifaces = self.run_device(qemu_devtype)
self.assertEqual(dev_modern, dev_no_opts)
self.assertIn('conventional-pci-device', ifaces)
self.assertIn('pci-express-device', ifaces)
def test_modern_only_devs(self):
self.check_modern_only('virtio-vga', VIRTIO_GPU)
self.check_modern_only('virtio-gpu-pci', VIRTIO_GPU)
self.check_modern_only('virtio-mouse-pci', VIRTIO_INPUT)
self.check_modern_only('virtio-tablet-pci', VIRTIO_INPUT)
self.check_modern_only('virtio-keyboard-pci', VIRTIO_INPUT)