Date: Fri, 17 Aug 2018 08:25:00 +0000 From: Matt Churchyard <matt.churchyard@userve.net> To: "Rodney W. Grimes" <freebsd-rwg@pdx.rh.CN85.dnsmgr.net>, Allan Jude <allanjude@FreeBSD.org> Cc: "freebsd-virtualization@freebsd.org" <freebsd-virtualization@FreeBSD.org> Subject: RE: Checking bhyve supported features (sysctls) Message-ID: <c73da71b7ae342bd83175faff0f105cf@SERVER.ad.usd-group.com> In-Reply-To: <201808161730.w7GHUaWv054788@pdx.rh.CN85.dnsmgr.net> References: <BC22EE63-357B-47F5-9121-A73B59633FE9@FreeBSD.org> <201808161730.w7GHUaWv054788@pdx.rh.CN85.dnsmgr.net>
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-----Original Message----- From: owner-freebsd-virtualization@freebsd.org <owner-freebsd-virtualizatio= n@freebsd.org> On Behalf Of Rodney W. Grimes Sent: 16 August 2018 18:31 To: Allan Jude <allanjude@FreeBSD.org> Cc: Matt Churchyard <matt.churchyard@userve.net>; freebsd-virtualization@fr= eebsd.org Subject: Re: Checking bhyve supported features (sysctls) > On August 16, 2018 5:28:05 PM GMT+01:00, "Rodney W. Grimes" <freebsd-rwg@= pdx.rh.CN85.dnsmgr.net> wrote: > >>=20 > >> Text manually wrapped to 80, any broken quoting is my fault - rwg > >>=20 > >> > > Hello, > >> > >=20 > >> > > I'm looking for better ways to check for bhyve support / > >available > >> > > features without trying to scan through dmesg output. > >> >=20 > >> > >Yes, it would be very good to remove that, as it usually tries=20 > >> > >to grep a non-existent file /var/run/dmesg.boot that is not=20 > >> > >created until after vm_bhyve has been called from > >/usr/local/etc/rc.d > >> > >when you have things set to autostartup >in /etc/rc.conf > >> >=20 > >> >=20 > >> > >=20 > >> > > I notice that the following 2 sysctl's appear to be set to 1 as > >soon > >> > > as the vmm module is loaded > >> > >=20 > >> > > hw.vmm.vmx.initialized: 1 > >> > > hw.vmm.vmx.cap.unrestricted_guest: 1 > >> > >=20 > >> > > Will these be available on both Intel & AMD processors as a way=20 > >> > > to determine if the module has loaded successfully and can run > >guests? > >> > >=20 > >> > > I also see the below sysctl related to iommu. > >> > >=20 > >> > > hw.vmm.iommu.initialized > >> > >=20 > >> > > Again, will this be set to 1 as soon as the module is loaded if=20 > >> > > iommu is supported, or only when it is used? > >> > > There also seems to be a vmm.amdvi.enable sysctl. > >> > > Would both these need checking or is vmm.iommu enough to=20 > >> > > determine support on any processor. > >> >=20 > >> > >Probalby the safest way for a shell script to decide if bhyve is=20 > >> > >up and running is to stat /dev/vmm, if that exists then the > >modules > >> > >have loaded and initialized and bhyve should be ready to process > >guests. > >> >=20 > >> > Hmm, I don't get /dev/vmm unless I actually have running guests. > >>=20 > >> I'll investigate that, I was pretty sure that you should get this=20 > >> as soon as the vmm.ko module is finished initialzing, but you might=20 > >> be right in that it takes a first vm to cause its creation. > >> Confirmed, /dev/vmm does not exist until the first vm is created. > >>=20 > >> >=20 > >> > >sysctl's mentiond above would be a poor way to make this > >determination. > >> >=20 > >> > It would be nice if sysctls were better documented. > >>=20 > >> Agreed. > >>=20 > >> > If vmx.initialized is set once vmm has successfully loaded, I=20 > >> > can't > >see a better way of checking for bhyve support (assuming it's not=20 > >Intel specific). This entry definitely exists and is set to 0 if you=20 > >load the module on a non-supported system, and set to 1 as soon as=20 > >vmm loads on my Intel test system. > >>=20 > >> Given its undocumented status you would be relying on an=20 > >> undocumented feature that could change in either name or behavior,=20 > >> and that is not desirable. > >>=20 > >> Let me see if I can come up with something else. > > > >I looked at the code for bhyvectl, bhyveload and byhve. They do not=20 > >actually try to decide if vmm is supported or not, they simply=20 > >process the error from a vm_create() or vm_open() call and exit with=20 > >an error code if they can not handle it (some of the code can handle=20 > >a vm_create failure if infact we are trying to create a vm that=20 > >already exists). > > > >If you want to maintain full compatibility a similiar stratergy may=20 > >be in order. > > > >Why is it that vm-bhyve specifically needs to know if the kernel has=20 > >vmm support or not? > >Cant it just be written to handle the errors returned if the=20 > >supported functions do not exist? >=20 > I think the question vm-bhyve wants to answer is: does the CPU have=20 > the required features to run a multicore VM. >Why does it need to know that? If it tries to start a multicore/thread VM= and the system can not support it an error is returned and the bhyve comma= nd fails. >Actually determining that specific issue is non-trivial iirc as some vmm s= upported CPU's can only run a single VM with a single thread in that VM (ea= rly core cpu's). >=20 > These or similar sysctls do seem to be the correct way to communicate=20 > that support. >I do not believe any of those sysctl's communicate that your on a broken c= pu or to what extent you can run vm's with multiple threads. So cap.unrestricted_guest from the vmm "capabilities" set of sysctls is not= a valid way to determine if the host has unrestricted guest support (requi= red for non-freebsd or multicore freebsd guests, and as you say missing fro= m some early VT-x capable processors)? >I went and looked at why vm-bhyve is groveling around in /var/run/dmesg.bo= ot and found that it is simply trying to determine if the host CPU is vmm c= apable, >specifically: >util::check_bhyve_support(){ >... >These checks are already built into the kernel. >This can all go in the bit bucket, if you try to start a VM on an unsuppor= ted system an error is returned, recoding this in shell is just setting you= rself up for "future" bugs. The kernel knows what features are supported but does not expose these, so = all I can do is similar to libvirt and run bhyve with different options to = see what errors pop up. I think I'll just remove all checking for now and let users discover the is= sue for themselves if bhyve won't run. Hopefully the vmx.initialized / cap.= * sysctls will at some point become a defined way of seeing if vmm is ready= / testing for vmm features, as apparently these serve no purpose at the mo= ment. Matt
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