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authorMarcel Apfelbaum <marcel@redhat.com>2017-12-14 17:26:37 +0200
committerMarcel Apfelbaum <marcel@redhat.com>2018-02-19 13:03:24 +0200
commitedab56321a0da3337adc3f9605d097d2606ab12c (patch)
treeccc03bbf07f2faf56fd03b299160a5f0f194a984 /docs
parent06329ccecfa022494fdba288b3ab5bcb8dff4159 (diff)
docs: add pvrdma device documentation.
Signed-off-by: Marcel Apfelbaum <marcel@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Yuval Shaia <yuval.shaia@oracle.com> Reviewed-by: Shamir Rabinovitch <shamir.rabinovitch@oracle.com>
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+Paravirtualized RDMA Device (PVRDMA)
+====================================
+
+
+1. Description
+===============
+PVRDMA is the QEMU implementation of VMware's paravirtualized RDMA device.
+It works with its Linux Kernel driver AS IS, no need for any special guest
+modifications.
+
+While it complies with the VMware device, it can also communicate with bare
+metal RDMA-enabled machines and does not require an RDMA HCA in the host, it
+can work with Soft-RoCE (rxe).
+
+It does not require the whole guest RAM to be pinned allowing memory
+over-commit and, even if not implemented yet, migration support will be
+possible with some HW assistance.
+
+A project presentation accompany this document:
+- http://events.linuxfoundation.org/sites/events/files/slides/lpc-2017-pvrdma-marcel-apfelbaum-yuval-shaia.pdf
+
+
+
+2. Setup
+========
+
+
+2.1 Guest setup
+===============
+Fedora 27+ kernels work out of the box, older distributions
+require updating the kernel to 4.14 to include the pvrdma driver.
+
+However the libpvrdma library needed by User Level Software is still
+not available as part of the distributions, so the rdma-core library
+needs to be compiled and optionally installed.
+
+Please follow the instructions at:
+ https://github.com/linux-rdma/rdma-core.git
+
+
+2.2 Host Setup
+==============
+The pvrdma backend is an ibdevice interface that can be exposed
+either by a Soft-RoCE(rxe) device on machines with no RDMA device,
+or an HCA SRIOV function(VF/PF).
+Note that ibdevice interfaces can't be shared between pvrdma devices,
+each one requiring a separate instance (rxe or SRIOV VF).
+
+
+2.2.1 Soft-RoCE backend(rxe)
+===========================
+A stable version of rxe is required, Fedora 27+ or a Linux
+Kernel 4.14+ is preferred.
+
+The rdma_rxe module is part of the Linux Kernel but not loaded by default.
+Install the User Level library (librxe) following the instructions from:
+https://github.com/SoftRoCE/rxe-dev/wiki/rxe-dev:-Home
+
+Associate an ETH interface with rxe by running:
+ rxe_cfg add eth0
+An rxe0 ibdevice interface will be created and can be used as pvrdma backend.
+
+
+2.2.2 RDMA device Virtual Function backend
+==========================================
+Nothing special is required, the pvrdma device can work not only with
+Ethernet Links, but also Infinibands Links.
+All is needed is an ibdevice with an active port, for Mellanox cards
+will be something like mlx5_6 which can be the backend.
+
+
+2.2.3 QEMU setup
+================
+Configure QEMU with --enable-rdma flag, installing
+the required RDMA libraries.
+
+
+
+3. Usage
+========
+Currently the device is working only with memory backed RAM
+and it must be mark as "shared":
+ -m 1G \
+ -object memory-backend-ram,id=mb1,size=1G,share \
+ -numa node,memdev=mb1 \
+
+The pvrdma device is composed of two functions:
+ - Function 0 is a vmxnet Ethernet Device which is redundant in Guest
+ but is required to pass the ibdevice GID using its MAC.
+ Examples:
+ For an rxe backend using eth0 interface it will use its mac:
+ -device vmxnet3,addr=<slot>.0,multifunction=on,mac=<eth0 MAC>
+ For an SRIOV VF, we take the Ethernet Interface exposed by it:
+ -device vmxnet3,multifunction=on,mac=<RoCE eth MAC>
+ - Function 1 is the actual device:
+ -device pvrdma,addr=<slot>.1,backend-dev=<ibdevice>,backend-gid-idx=<gid>,backend-port=<port>
+ where the ibdevice can be rxe or RDMA VF (e.g. mlx5_4)
+ Note: Pay special attention that the GID at backend-gid-idx matches vmxnet's MAC.
+ The rules of conversion are part of the RoCE spec, but since manual conversion
+ is not required, spotting problems is not hard:
+ Example: GID: fe80:0000:0000:0000:7efe:90ff:fecb:743a
+ MAC: 7c:fe:90:cb:74:3a
+ Note the difference between the first byte of the MAC and the GID.
+
+
+
+4. Implementation details
+=========================
+
+
+4.1 Overview
+============
+The device acts like a proxy between the Guest Driver and the host
+ibdevice interface.
+On configuration path:
+ - For every hardware resource request (PD/QP/CQ/...) the pvrdma will request
+ a resource from the backend interface, maintaining a 1-1 mapping
+ between the guest and host.
+On data path:
+ - Every post_send/receive received from the guest will be converted into
+ a post_send/receive for the backend. The buffers data will not be touched
+ or copied resulting in near bare-metal performance for large enough buffers.
+ - Completions from the backend interface will result in completions for
+ the pvrdma device.
+
+
+4.2 PCI BARs
+============
+PCI Bars:
+ BAR 0 - MSI-X
+ MSI-X vectors:
+ (0) Command - used when execution of a command is completed.
+ (1) Async - not in use.
+ (2) Completion - used when a completion event is placed in
+ device's CQ ring.
+ BAR 1 - Registers
+ --------------------------------------------------------
+ | VERSION | DSR | CTL | REQ | ERR | ICR | IMR | MAC |
+ --------------------------------------------------------
+ DSR - Address of driver/device shared memory used
+ for the command channel, used for passing:
+ - General info such as driver version
+ - Address of 'command' and 'response'
+ - Address of async ring
+ - Address of device's CQ ring
+ - Device capabilities
+ CTL - Device control operations (activate, reset etc)
+ IMG - Set interrupt mask
+ REQ - Command execution register
+ ERR - Operation status
+
+ BAR 2 - UAR
+ ---------------------------------------------------------
+ | QP_NUM | SEND/RECV Flag || CQ_NUM | ARM/POLL Flag |
+ ---------------------------------------------------------
+ - Offset 0 used for QP operations (send and recv)
+ - Offset 4 used for CQ operations (arm and poll)
+
+
+4.3 Major flows
+===============
+
+4.3.1 Create CQ
+===============
+ - Guest driver
+ - Allocates pages for CQ ring
+ - Creates page directory (pdir) to hold CQ ring's pages
+ - Initializes CQ ring
+ - Initializes 'Create CQ' command object (cqe, pdir etc)
+ - Copies the command to 'command' address
+ - Writes 0 into REQ register
+ - Device
+ - Reads the request object from the 'command' address
+ - Allocates CQ object and initialize CQ ring based on pdir
+ - Creates the backend CQ
+ - Writes operation status to ERR register
+ - Posts command-interrupt to guest
+ - Guest driver
+ - Reads the HW response code from ERR register
+
+4.3.2 Create QP
+===============
+ - Guest driver
+ - Allocates pages for send and receive rings
+ - Creates page directory(pdir) to hold the ring's pages
+ - Initializes 'Create QP' command object (max_send_wr,
+ send_cq_handle, recv_cq_handle, pdir etc)
+ - Copies the object to 'command' address
+ - Write 0 into REQ register
+ - Device
+ - Reads the request object from 'command' address
+ - Allocates the QP object and initialize
+ - Send and recv rings based on pdir
+ - Send and recv ring state
+ - Creates the backend QP
+ - Writes the operation status to ERR register
+ - Posts command-interrupt to guest
+ - Guest driver
+ - Reads the HW response code from ERR register
+
+4.3.3 Post receive
+==================
+ - Guest driver
+ - Initializes a wqe and place it on recv ring
+ - Write to qpn|qp_recv_bit (31) to QP offset in UAR
+ - Device
+ - Extracts qpn from UAR
+ - Walks through the ring and does the following for each wqe
+ - Prepares the backend CQE context to be used when
+ receiving completion from backend (wr_id, op_code, emu_cq_num)
+ - For each sge prepares backend sge
+ - Calls backend's post_recv
+
+4.3.4 Process backend events
+============================
+ - Done by a dedicated thread used to process backend events;
+ at initialization is attached to the device and creates
+ the communication channel.
+ - Thread main loop:
+ - Polls for completions
+ - Extracts QEMU _cq_num, wr_id and op_code from context
+ - Writes CQE to CQ ring
+ - Writes CQ number to device CQ
+ - Sends completion-interrupt to guest
+ - Deallocates context
+ - Acks the event to backend
+
+
+
+5. Limitations
+==============
+- The device obviously is limited by the Guest Linux Driver features implementation
+ of the VMware device API.
+- Memory registration mechanism requires mremap for every page in the buffer in order
+ to map it to a contiguous virtual address range. Since this is not the data path
+ it should not matter much. If the default max mr size is increased, be aware that
+ memory registration can take up to 0.5 seconds for 1GB of memory.
+- The device requires target page size to be the same as the host page size,
+ otherwise it will fail to init.
+- QEMU cannot map guest RAM from a file descriptor if a pvrdma device is attached,
+ so it can't work with huge pages. The limitation will be addressed in the future,
+ however QEMU allocates Guest RAM with MADV_HUGEPAGE so if there are enough huge
+ pages available, QEMU will use them. QEMU will fail to init if the requirements
+ are not met.
+
+
+
+6. Performance
+==============
+By design the pvrdma device exits on each post-send/receive, so for small buffers
+the performance is affected; however for medium buffers it will became close to
+bare metal and from 1MB buffers and up it reaches bare metal performance.
+(tested with 2 VMs, the pvrdma devices connected to 2 VFs of the same device)
+
+All the above assumes no memory registration is done on data path.