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1 =========
2 Migration
3 =========
4
5 QEMU has code to load/save the state of the guest that it is running.
6 These are two complementary operations. Saving the state just does
7 that, saves the state for each device that the guest is running.
8 Restoring a guest is just the opposite operation: we need to load the
9 state of each device.
10
11 For this to work, QEMU has to be launched with the same arguments the
12 two times. I.e. it can only restore the state in one guest that has
13 the same devices that the one it was saved (this last requirement can
14 be relaxed a bit, but for now we can consider that configuration has
15 to be exactly the same).
16
17 Once that we are able to save/restore a guest, a new functionality is
18 requested: migration. This means that QEMU is able to start in one
19 machine and being "migrated" to another machine. I.e. being moved to
20 another machine.
21
22 Next was the "live migration" functionality. This is important
23 because some guests run with a lot of state (specially RAM), and it
24 can take a while to move all state from one machine to another. Live
25 migration allows the guest to continue running while the state is
26 transferred. Only while the last part of the state is transferred has
27 the guest to be stopped. Typically the time that the guest is
28 unresponsive during live migration is the low hundred of milliseconds
29 (notice that this depends on a lot of things).
30
31 .. contents::
32
33 Transports
34 ==========
35
36 The migration stream is normally just a byte stream that can be passed
37 over any transport.
38
39 - tcp migration: do the migration using tcp sockets
40 - unix migration: do the migration using unix sockets
41 - exec migration: do the migration using the stdin/stdout through a process.
42 - fd migration: do the migration using a file descriptor that is
43 passed to QEMU. QEMU doesn't care how this file descriptor is opened.
44
45 In addition, support is included for migration using RDMA, which
46 transports the page data using ``RDMA``, where the hardware takes care of
47 transporting the pages, and the load on the CPU is much lower. While the
48 internals of RDMA migration are a bit different, this isn't really visible
49 outside the RAM migration code.
50
51 All these migration protocols use the same infrastructure to
52 save/restore state devices. This infrastructure is shared with the
53 savevm/loadvm functionality.
54
55 Debugging
56 =========
57
58 The migration stream can be analyzed thanks to ``scripts/analyze-migration.py``.
59
60 Example usage:
61
62 .. code-block:: shell
63
64 $ qemu-system-x86_64 -display none -monitor stdio
65 (qemu) migrate "exec:cat > mig"
66 (qemu) q
67 $ ./scripts/analyze-migration.py -f mig
68 {
69 "ram (3)": {
70 "section sizes": {
71 "pc.ram": "0x0000000008000000",
72 ...
73
74 See also ``analyze-migration.py -h`` help for more options.
75
76 Common infrastructure
77 =====================
78
79 The files, sockets or fd's that carry the migration stream are abstracted by
80 the ``QEMUFile`` type (see ``migration/qemu-file.h``). In most cases this
81 is connected to a subtype of ``QIOChannel`` (see ``io/``).
82
83
84 Saving the state of one device
85 ==============================
86
87 For most devices, the state is saved in a single call to the migration
88 infrastructure; these are *non-iterative* devices. The data for these
89 devices is sent at the end of precopy migration, when the CPUs are paused.
90 There are also *iterative* devices, which contain a very large amount of
91 data (e.g. RAM or large tables). See the iterative device section below.
92
93 General advice for device developers
94 ------------------------------------
95
96 - The migration state saved should reflect the device being modelled rather
97 than the way your implementation works. That way if you change the implementation
98 later the migration stream will stay compatible. That model may include
99 internal state that's not directly visible in a register.
100
101 - When saving a migration stream the device code may walk and check
102 the state of the device. These checks might fail in various ways (e.g.
103 discovering internal state is corrupt or that the guest has done something bad).
104 Consider carefully before asserting/aborting at this point, since the
105 normal response from users is that *migration broke their VM* since it had
106 apparently been running fine until then. In these error cases, the device
107 should log a message indicating the cause of error, and should consider
108 putting the device into an error state, allowing the rest of the VM to
109 continue execution.
110
111 - The migration might happen at an inconvenient point,
112 e.g. right in the middle of the guest reprogramming the device, during
113 guest reboot or shutdown or while the device is waiting for external IO.
114 It's strongly preferred that migrations do not fail in this situation,
115 since in the cloud environment migrations might happen automatically to
116 VMs that the administrator doesn't directly control.
117
118 - If you do need to fail a migration, ensure that sufficient information
119 is logged to identify what went wrong.
120
121 - The destination should treat an incoming migration stream as hostile
122 (which we do to varying degrees in the existing code). Check that offsets
123 into buffers and the like can't cause overruns. Fail the incoming migration
124 in the case of a corrupted stream like this.
125
126 - Take care with internal device state or behaviour that might become
127 migration version dependent. For example, the order of PCI capabilities
128 is required to stay constant across migration. Another example would
129 be that a special case handled by subsections (see below) might become
130 much more common if a default behaviour is changed.
131
132 - The state of the source should not be changed or destroyed by the
133 outgoing migration. Migrations timing out or being failed by
134 higher levels of management, or failures of the destination host are
135 not unusual, and in that case the VM is restarted on the source.
136 Note that the management layer can validly revert the migration
137 even though the QEMU level of migration has succeeded as long as it
138 does it before starting execution on the destination.
139
140 - Buses and devices should be able to explicitly specify addresses when
141 instantiated, and management tools should use those. For example,
142 when hot adding USB devices it's important to specify the ports
143 and addresses, since implicit ordering based on the command line order
144 may be different on the destination. This can result in the
145 device state being loaded into the wrong device.
146
147 VMState
148 -------
149
150 Most device data can be described using the ``VMSTATE`` macros (mostly defined
151 in ``include/migration/vmstate.h``).
152
153 An example (from hw/input/pckbd.c)
154
155 .. code:: c
156
157 static const VMStateDescription vmstate_kbd = {
158 .name = "pckbd",
159 .version_id = 3,
160 .minimum_version_id = 3,
161 .fields = (VMStateField[]) {
162 VMSTATE_UINT8(write_cmd, KBDState),
163 VMSTATE_UINT8(status, KBDState),
164 VMSTATE_UINT8(mode, KBDState),
165 VMSTATE_UINT8(pending, KBDState),
166 VMSTATE_END_OF_LIST()
167 }
168 };
169
170 We are declaring the state with name "pckbd". The ``version_id`` is
171 3, and there are 4 uint8_t fields in the KBDState structure. We
172 registered this ``VMSTATEDescription`` with one of the following
173 functions. The first one will generate a device ``instance_id``
174 different for each registration. Use the second one if you already
175 have an id that is different for each instance of the device:
176
177 .. code:: c
178
179 vmstate_register_any(NULL, &vmstate_kbd, s);
180 vmstate_register(NULL, instance_id, &vmstate_kbd, s);
181
182 For devices that are ``qdev`` based, we can register the device in the class
183 init function:
184
185 .. code:: c
186
187 dc->vmsd = &vmstate_kbd_isa;
188
189 The VMState macros take care of ensuring that the device data section
190 is formatted portably (normally big endian) and make some compile time checks
191 against the types of the fields in the structures.
192
193 VMState macros can include other VMStateDescriptions to store substructures
194 (see ``VMSTATE_STRUCT_``), arrays (``VMSTATE_ARRAY_``) and variable length
195 arrays (``VMSTATE_VARRAY_``). Various other macros exist for special
196 cases.
197
198 Note that the format on the wire is still very raw; i.e. a VMSTATE_UINT32
199 ends up with a 4 byte bigendian representation on the wire; in the future
200 it might be possible to use a more structured format.
201
202 Legacy way
203 ----------
204
205 This way is going to disappear as soon as all current users are ported to VMSTATE;
206 although converting existing code can be tricky, and thus 'soon' is relative.
207
208 Each device has to register two functions, one to save the state and
209 another to load the state back.
210
211 .. code:: c
212
213 int register_savevm_live(const char *idstr,
214 int instance_id,
215 int version_id,
216 SaveVMHandlers *ops,
217 void *opaque);
218
219 Two functions in the ``ops`` structure are the ``save_state``
220 and ``load_state`` functions. Notice that ``load_state`` receives a version_id
221 parameter to know what state format is receiving. ``save_state`` doesn't
222 have a version_id parameter because it always uses the latest version.
223
224 Note that because the VMState macros still save the data in a raw
225 format, in many cases it's possible to replace legacy code
226 with a carefully constructed VMState description that matches the
227 byte layout of the existing code.
228
229 Changing migration data structures
230 ----------------------------------
231
232 When we migrate a device, we save/load the state as a series
233 of fields. Sometimes, due to bugs or new functionality, we need to
234 change the state to store more/different information. Changing the migration
235 state saved for a device can break migration compatibility unless
236 care is taken to use the appropriate techniques. In general QEMU tries
237 to maintain forward migration compatibility (i.e. migrating from
238 QEMU n->n+1) and there are users who benefit from backward compatibility
239 as well.
240
241 Subsections
242 -----------
243
244 The most common structure change is adding new data, e.g. when adding
245 a newer form of device, or adding that state that you previously
246 forgot to migrate. This is best solved using a subsection.
247
248 A subsection is "like" a device vmstate, but with a particularity, it
249 has a Boolean function that tells if that values are needed to be sent
250 or not. If this functions returns false, the subsection is not sent.
251 Subsections have a unique name, that is looked for on the receiving
252 side.
253
254 On the receiving side, if we found a subsection for a device that we
255 don't understand, we just fail the migration. If we understand all
256 the subsections, then we load the state with success. There's no check
257 that a subsection is loaded, so a newer QEMU that knows about a subsection
258 can (with care) load a stream from an older QEMU that didn't send
259 the subsection.
260
261 If the new data is only needed in a rare case, then the subsection
262 can be made conditional on that case and the migration will still
263 succeed to older QEMUs in most cases. This is OK for data that's
264 critical, but in some use cases it's preferred that the migration
265 should succeed even with the data missing. To support this the
266 subsection can be connected to a device property and from there
267 to a versioned machine type.
268
269 The 'pre_load' and 'post_load' functions on subsections are only
270 called if the subsection is loaded.
271
272 One important note is that the outer post_load() function is called "after"
273 loading all subsections, because a newer subsection could change the same
274 value that it uses. A flag, and the combination of outer pre_load and
275 post_load can be used to detect whether a subsection was loaded, and to
276 fall back on default behaviour when the subsection isn't present.
277
278 Example:
279
280 .. code:: c
281
282 static bool ide_drive_pio_state_needed(void *opaque)
283 {
284 IDEState *s = opaque;
285
286 return ((s->status & DRQ_STAT) != 0)
287 || (s->bus->error_status & BM_STATUS_PIO_RETRY);
288 }
289
290 const VMStateDescription vmstate_ide_drive_pio_state = {
291 .name = "ide_drive/pio_state",
292 .version_id = 1,
293 .minimum_version_id = 1,
294 .pre_save = ide_drive_pio_pre_save,
295 .post_load = ide_drive_pio_post_load,
296 .needed = ide_drive_pio_state_needed,
297 .fields = (VMStateField[]) {
298 VMSTATE_INT32(req_nb_sectors, IDEState),
299 VMSTATE_VARRAY_INT32(io_buffer, IDEState, io_buffer_total_len, 1,
300 vmstate_info_uint8, uint8_t),
301 VMSTATE_INT32(cur_io_buffer_offset, IDEState),
302 VMSTATE_INT32(cur_io_buffer_len, IDEState),
303 VMSTATE_UINT8(end_transfer_fn_idx, IDEState),
304 VMSTATE_INT32(elementary_transfer_size, IDEState),
305 VMSTATE_INT32(packet_transfer_size, IDEState),
306 VMSTATE_END_OF_LIST()
307 }
308 };
309
310 const VMStateDescription vmstate_ide_drive = {
311 .name = "ide_drive",
312 .version_id = 3,
313 .minimum_version_id = 0,
314 .post_load = ide_drive_post_load,
315 .fields = (VMStateField[]) {
316 .... several fields ....
317 VMSTATE_END_OF_LIST()
318 },
319 .subsections = (const VMStateDescription*[]) {
320 &vmstate_ide_drive_pio_state,
321 NULL
322 }
323 };
324
325 Here we have a subsection for the pio state. We only need to
326 save/send this state when we are in the middle of a pio operation
327 (that is what ``ide_drive_pio_state_needed()`` checks). If DRQ_STAT is
328 not enabled, the values on that fields are garbage and don't need to
329 be sent.
330
331 Connecting subsections to properties
332 ------------------------------------
333
334 Using a condition function that checks a 'property' to determine whether
335 to send a subsection allows backward migration compatibility when
336 new subsections are added, especially when combined with versioned
337 machine types.
338
339 For example:
340
341 a) Add a new property using ``DEFINE_PROP_BOOL`` - e.g. support-foo and
342 default it to true.
343 b) Add an entry to the ``hw_compat_`` for the previous version that sets
344 the property to false.
345 c) Add a static bool support_foo function that tests the property.
346 d) Add a subsection with a .needed set to the support_foo function
347 e) (potentially) Add an outer pre_load that sets up a default value
348 for 'foo' to be used if the subsection isn't loaded.
349
350 Now that subsection will not be generated when using an older
351 machine type and the migration stream will be accepted by older
352 QEMU versions.
353
354 Not sending existing elements
355 -----------------------------
356
357 Sometimes members of the VMState are no longer needed:
358
359 - removing them will break migration compatibility
360
361 - making them version dependent and bumping the version will break backward migration
362 compatibility.
363
364 Adding a dummy field into the migration stream is normally the best way to preserve
365 compatibility.
366
367 If the field really does need to be removed then:
368
369 a) Add a new property/compatibility/function in the same way for subsections above.
370 b) replace the VMSTATE macro with the _TEST version of the macro, e.g.:
371
372 ``VMSTATE_UINT32(foo, barstruct)``
373
374 becomes
375
376 ``VMSTATE_UINT32_TEST(foo, barstruct, pre_version_baz)``
377
378 Sometime in the future when we no longer care about the ancient versions these can be killed off.
379 Note that for backward compatibility it's important to fill in the structure with
380 data that the destination will understand.
381
382 Any difference in the predicates on the source and destination will end up
383 with different fields being enabled and data being loaded into the wrong
384 fields; for this reason conditional fields like this are very fragile.
385
386 Versions
387 --------
388
389 Version numbers are intended for major incompatible changes to the
390 migration of a device, and using them breaks backward-migration
391 compatibility; in general most changes can be made by adding Subsections
392 (see above) or _TEST macros (see above) which won't break compatibility.
393
394 Each version is associated with a series of fields saved. The ``save_state`` always saves
395 the state as the newer version. But ``load_state`` sometimes is able to
396 load state from an older version.
397
398 You can see that there are two version fields:
399
400 - ``version_id``: the maximum version_id supported by VMState for that device.
401 - ``minimum_version_id``: the minimum version_id that VMState is able to understand
402 for that device.
403
404 VMState is able to read versions from minimum_version_id to version_id.
405
406 There are *_V* forms of many ``VMSTATE_`` macros to load fields for version dependent fields,
407 e.g.
408
409 .. code:: c
410
411 VMSTATE_UINT16_V(ip_id, Slirp, 2),
412
413 only loads that field for versions 2 and newer.
414
415 Saving state will always create a section with the 'version_id' value
416 and thus can't be loaded by any older QEMU.
417
418 Massaging functions
419 -------------------
420
421 Sometimes, it is not enough to be able to save the state directly
422 from one structure, we need to fill the correct values there. One
423 example is when we are using kvm. Before saving the cpu state, we
424 need to ask kvm to copy to QEMU the state that it is using. And the
425 opposite when we are loading the state, we need a way to tell kvm to
426 load the state for the cpu that we have just loaded from the QEMUFile.
427
428 The functions to do that are inside a vmstate definition, and are called:
429
430 - ``int (*pre_load)(void *opaque);``
431
432 This function is called before we load the state of one device.
433
434 - ``int (*post_load)(void *opaque, int version_id);``
435
436 This function is called after we load the state of one device.
437
438 - ``int (*pre_save)(void *opaque);``
439
440 This function is called before we save the state of one device.
441
442 - ``int (*post_save)(void *opaque);``
443
444 This function is called after we save the state of one device
445 (even upon failure, unless the call to pre_save returned an error).
446
447 Example: You can look at hpet.c, that uses the first three functions
448 to massage the state that is transferred.
449
450 The ``VMSTATE_WITH_TMP`` macro may be useful when the migration
451 data doesn't match the stored device data well; it allows an
452 intermediate temporary structure to be populated with migration
453 data and then transferred to the main structure.
454
455 If you use memory API functions that update memory layout outside
456 initialization (i.e., in response to a guest action), this is a strong
457 indication that you need to call these functions in a ``post_load`` callback.
458 Examples of such memory API functions are:
459
460 - memory_region_add_subregion()
461 - memory_region_del_subregion()
462 - memory_region_set_readonly()
463 - memory_region_set_nonvolatile()
464 - memory_region_set_enabled()
465 - memory_region_set_address()
466 - memory_region_set_alias_offset()
467
468 Iterative device migration
469 --------------------------
470
471 Some devices, such as RAM, Block storage or certain platform devices,
472 have large amounts of data that would mean that the CPUs would be
473 paused for too long if they were sent in one section. For these
474 devices an *iterative* approach is taken.
475
476 The iterative devices generally don't use VMState macros
477 (although it may be possible in some cases) and instead use
478 qemu_put_*/qemu_get_* macros to read/write data to the stream. Specialist
479 versions exist for high bandwidth IO.
480
481
482 An iterative device must provide:
483
484 - A ``save_setup`` function that initialises the data structures and
485 transmits a first section containing information on the device. In the
486 case of RAM this transmits a list of RAMBlocks and sizes.
487
488 - A ``load_setup`` function that initialises the data structures on the
489 destination.
490
491 - A ``state_pending_exact`` function that indicates how much more
492 data we must save. The core migration code will use this to
493 determine when to pause the CPUs and complete the migration.
494
495 - A ``state_pending_estimate`` function that indicates how much more
496 data we must save. When the estimated amount is smaller than the
497 threshold, we call ``state_pending_exact``.
498
499 - A ``save_live_iterate`` function should send a chunk of data until
500 the point that stream bandwidth limits tell it to stop. Each call
501 generates one section.
502
503 - A ``save_live_complete_precopy`` function that must transmit the
504 last section for the device containing any remaining data.
505
506 - A ``load_state`` function used to load sections generated by
507 any of the save functions that generate sections.
508
509 - ``cleanup`` functions for both save and load that are called
510 at the end of migration.
511
512 Note that the contents of the sections for iterative migration tend
513 to be open-coded by the devices; care should be taken in parsing
514 the results and structuring the stream to make them easy to validate.
515
516 Device ordering
517 ---------------
518
519 There are cases in which the ordering of device loading matters; for
520 example in some systems where a device may assert an interrupt during loading,
521 if the interrupt controller is loaded later then it might lose the state.
522
523 Some ordering is implicitly provided by the order in which the machine
524 definition creates devices, however this is somewhat fragile.
525
526 The ``MigrationPriority`` enum provides a means of explicitly enforcing
527 ordering. Numerically higher priorities are loaded earlier.
528 The priority is set by setting the ``priority`` field of the top level
529 ``VMStateDescription`` for the device.
530
531 Stream structure
532 ================
533
534 The stream tries to be word and endian agnostic, allowing migration between hosts
535 of different characteristics running the same VM.
536
537 - Header
538
539 - Magic
540 - Version
541 - VM configuration section
542
543 - Machine type
544 - Target page bits
545 - List of sections
546 Each section contains a device, or one iteration of a device save.
547
548 - section type
549 - section id
550 - ID string (First section of each device)
551 - instance id (First section of each device)
552 - version id (First section of each device)
553 - <device data>
554 - Footer mark
555 - EOF mark
556 - VM Description structure
557 Consisting of a JSON description of the contents for analysis only
558
559 The ``device data`` in each section consists of the data produced
560 by the code described above. For non-iterative devices they have a single
561 section; iterative devices have an initial and last section and a set
562 of parts in between.
563 Note that there is very little checking by the common code of the integrity
564 of the ``device data`` contents, that's up to the devices themselves.
565 The ``footer mark`` provides a little bit of protection for the case where
566 the receiving side reads more or less data than expected.
567
568 The ``ID string`` is normally unique, having been formed from a bus name
569 and device address, PCI devices and storage devices hung off PCI controllers
570 fit this pattern well. Some devices are fixed single instances (e.g. "pc-ram").
571 Others (especially either older devices or system devices which for
572 some reason don't have a bus concept) make use of the ``instance id``
573 for otherwise identically named devices.
574
575 Return path
576 -----------
577
578 Only a unidirectional stream is required for normal migration, however a
579 ``return path`` can be created when bidirectional communication is desired.
580 This is primarily used by postcopy, but is also used to return a success
581 flag to the source at the end of migration.
582
583 ``qemu_file_get_return_path(QEMUFile* fwdpath)`` gives the QEMUFile* for the return
584 path.
585
586 Source side
587
588 Forward path - written by migration thread
589 Return path - opened by main thread, read by return-path thread
590
591 Destination side
592
593 Forward path - read by main thread
594 Return path - opened by main thread, written by main thread AND postcopy
595 thread (protected by rp_mutex)
596
597 Dirty limit
598 =====================
599 The dirty limit, short for dirty page rate upper limit, is a new capability
600 introduced in the 8.1 QEMU release that uses a new algorithm based on the KVM
601 dirty ring to throttle down the guest during live migration.
602
603 The algorithm framework is as follows:
604
605 ::
606
607 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
608 main --------------> throttle thread ------------> PREPARE(1) <--------
609 thread \ | |
610 \ | |
611 \ V |
612 -\ CALCULATE(2) |
613 \ | |
614 \ | |
615 \ V |
616 \ SET PENALTY(3) -----
617 -\ |
618 \ |
619 \ V
620 -> virtual CPU thread -------> ACCEPT PENALTY(4)
621 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
622
623 When the qmp command qmp_set_vcpu_dirty_limit is called for the first time,
624 the QEMU main thread starts the throttle thread. The throttle thread, once
625 launched, executes the loop, which consists of three steps:
626
627 - PREPARE (1)
628
629 The entire work of PREPARE (1) is preparation for the second stage,
630 CALCULATE(2), as the name implies. It involves preparing the dirty
631 page rate value and the corresponding upper limit of the VM:
632 The dirty page rate is calculated via the KVM dirty ring mechanism,
633 which tells QEMU how many dirty pages a virtual CPU has had since the
634 last KVM_EXIT_DIRTY_RING_FULL exception; The dirty page rate upper
635 limit is specified by caller, therefore fetch it directly.
636
637 - CALCULATE (2)
638
639 Calculate a suitable sleep period for each virtual CPU, which will be
640 used to determine the penalty for the target virtual CPU. The
641 computation must be done carefully in order to reduce the dirty page
642 rate progressively down to the upper limit without oscillation. To
643 achieve this, two strategies are provided: the first is to add or
644 subtract sleep time based on the ratio of the current dirty page rate
645 to the limit, which is used when the current dirty page rate is far
646 from the limit; the second is to add or subtract a fixed time when
647 the current dirty page rate is close to the limit.
648
649 - SET PENALTY (3)
650
651 Set the sleep time for each virtual CPU that should be penalized based
652 on the results of the calculation supplied by step CALCULATE (2).
653
654 After completing the three above stages, the throttle thread loops back
655 to step PREPARE (1) until the dirty limit is reached.
656
657 On the other hand, each virtual CPU thread reads the sleep duration and
658 sleeps in the path of the KVM_EXIT_DIRTY_RING_FULL exception handler, that
659 is ACCEPT PENALTY (4). Virtual CPUs tied with writing processes will
660 obviously exit to the path and get penalized, whereas virtual CPUs involved
661 with read processes will not.
662
663 In summary, thanks to the KVM dirty ring technology, the dirty limit
664 algorithm will restrict virtual CPUs as needed to keep their dirty page
665 rate inside the limit. This leads to more steady reading performance during
666 live migration and can aid in improving large guest responsiveness.
667
668 Postcopy
669 ========
670
671 'Postcopy' migration is a way to deal with migrations that refuse to converge
672 (or take too long to converge) its plus side is that there is an upper bound on
673 the amount of migration traffic and time it takes, the down side is that during
674 the postcopy phase, a failure of *either* side causes the guest to be lost.
675
676 In postcopy the destination CPUs are started before all the memory has been
677 transferred, and accesses to pages that are yet to be transferred cause
678 a fault that's translated by QEMU into a request to the source QEMU.
679
680 Postcopy can be combined with precopy (i.e. normal migration) so that if precopy
681 doesn't finish in a given time the switch is made to postcopy.
682
683 Enabling postcopy
684 -----------------
685
686 To enable postcopy, issue this command on the monitor (both source and
687 destination) prior to the start of migration:
688
689 ``migrate_set_capability postcopy-ram on``
690
691 The normal commands are then used to start a migration, which is still
692 started in precopy mode. Issuing:
693
694 ``migrate_start_postcopy``
695
696 will now cause the transition from precopy to postcopy.
697 It can be issued immediately after migration is started or any
698 time later on. Issuing it after the end of a migration is harmless.
699
700 Blocktime is a postcopy live migration metric, intended to show how
701 long the vCPU was in state of interruptible sleep due to pagefault.
702 That metric is calculated both for all vCPUs as overlapped value, and
703 separately for each vCPU. These values are calculated on destination
704 side. To enable postcopy blocktime calculation, enter following
705 command on destination monitor:
706
707 ``migrate_set_capability postcopy-blocktime on``
708
709 Postcopy blocktime can be retrieved by query-migrate qmp command.
710 postcopy-blocktime value of qmp command will show overlapped blocking
711 time for all vCPU, postcopy-vcpu-blocktime will show list of blocking
712 time per vCPU.
713
714 .. note::
715 During the postcopy phase, the bandwidth limits set using
716 ``migrate_set_parameter`` is ignored (to avoid delaying requested pages that
717 the destination is waiting for).
718
719 Postcopy device transfer
720 ------------------------
721
722 Loading of device data may cause the device emulation to access guest RAM
723 that may trigger faults that have to be resolved by the source, as such
724 the migration stream has to be able to respond with page data *during* the
725 device load, and hence the device data has to be read from the stream completely
726 before the device load begins to free the stream up. This is achieved by
727 'packaging' the device data into a blob that's read in one go.
728
729 Source behaviour
730 ----------------
731
732 Until postcopy is entered the migration stream is identical to normal
733 precopy, except for the addition of a 'postcopy advise' command at
734 the beginning, to tell the destination that postcopy might happen.
735 When postcopy starts the source sends the page discard data and then
736 forms the 'package' containing:
737
738 - Command: 'postcopy listen'
739 - The device state
740
741 A series of sections, identical to the precopy streams device state stream
742 containing everything except postcopiable devices (i.e. RAM)
743 - Command: 'postcopy run'
744
745 The 'package' is sent as the data part of a Command: ``CMD_PACKAGED``, and the
746 contents are formatted in the same way as the main migration stream.
747
748 During postcopy the source scans the list of dirty pages and sends them
749 to the destination without being requested (in much the same way as precopy),
750 however when a page request is received from the destination, the dirty page
751 scanning restarts from the requested location. This causes requested pages
752 to be sent quickly, and also causes pages directly after the requested page
753 to be sent quickly in the hope that those pages are likely to be used
754 by the destination soon.
755
756 Destination behaviour
757 ---------------------
758
759 Initially the destination looks the same as precopy, with a single thread
760 reading the migration stream; the 'postcopy advise' and 'discard' commands
761 are processed to change the way RAM is managed, but don't affect the stream
762 processing.
763
764 ::
765
766 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
767 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
768 main -----DISCARD-CMD_PACKAGED ( LISTEN DEVICE DEVICE DEVICE RUN )
769 thread | |
770 | (page request)
771 | \___
772 v \
773 listen thread: --- page -- page -- page -- page -- page --
774
775 a b c
776 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
777
778 - On receipt of ``CMD_PACKAGED`` (1)
779
780 All the data associated with the package - the ( ... ) section in the diagram -
781 is read into memory, and the main thread recurses into qemu_loadvm_state_main
782 to process the contents of the package (2) which contains commands (3,6) and
783 devices (4...)
784
785 - On receipt of 'postcopy listen' - 3 -(i.e. the 1st command in the package)
786
787 a new thread (a) is started that takes over servicing the migration stream,
788 while the main thread carries on loading the package. It loads normal
789 background page data (b) but if during a device load a fault happens (5)
790 the returned page (c) is loaded by the listen thread allowing the main
791 threads device load to carry on.
792
793 - The last thing in the ``CMD_PACKAGED`` is a 'RUN' command (6)
794
795 letting the destination CPUs start running. At the end of the
796 ``CMD_PACKAGED`` (7) the main thread returns to normal running behaviour and
797 is no longer used by migration, while the listen thread carries on servicing
798 page data until the end of migration.
799
800 Postcopy Recovery
801 -----------------
802
803 Comparing to precopy, postcopy is special on error handlings. When any
804 error happens (in this case, mostly network errors), QEMU cannot easily
805 fail a migration because VM data resides in both source and destination
806 QEMU instances. On the other hand, when issue happens QEMU on both sides
807 will go into a paused state. It'll need a recovery phase to continue a
808 paused postcopy migration.
809
810 The recovery phase normally contains a few steps:
811
812 - When network issue occurs, both QEMU will go into PAUSED state
813
814 - When the network is recovered (or a new network is provided), the admin
815 can setup the new channel for migration using QMP command
816 'migrate-recover' on destination node, preparing for a resume.
817
818 - On source host, the admin can continue the interrupted postcopy
819 migration using QMP command 'migrate' with resume=true flag set.
820
821 - After the connection is re-established, QEMU will continue the postcopy
822 migration on both sides.
823
824 During a paused postcopy migration, the VM can logically still continue
825 running, and it will not be impacted from any page access to pages that
826 were already migrated to destination VM before the interruption happens.
827 However, if any of the missing pages got accessed on destination VM, the VM
828 thread will be halted waiting for the page to be migrated, it means it can
829 be halted until the recovery is complete.
830
831 The impact of accessing missing pages can be relevant to different
832 configurations of the guest. For example, when with async page fault
833 enabled, logically the guest can proactively schedule out the threads
834 accessing missing pages.
835
836 Postcopy states
837 ---------------
838
839 Postcopy moves through a series of states (see postcopy_state) from
840 ADVISE->DISCARD->LISTEN->RUNNING->END
841
842 - Advise
843
844 Set at the start of migration if postcopy is enabled, even
845 if it hasn't had the start command; here the destination
846 checks that its OS has the support needed for postcopy, and performs
847 setup to ensure the RAM mappings are suitable for later postcopy.
848 The destination will fail early in migration at this point if the
849 required OS support is not present.
850 (Triggered by reception of POSTCOPY_ADVISE command)
851
852 - Discard
853
854 Entered on receipt of the first 'discard' command; prior to
855 the first Discard being performed, hugepages are switched off
856 (using madvise) to ensure that no new huge pages are created
857 during the postcopy phase, and to cause any huge pages that
858 have discards on them to be broken.
859
860 - Listen
861
862 The first command in the package, POSTCOPY_LISTEN, switches
863 the destination state to Listen, and starts a new thread
864 (the 'listen thread') which takes over the job of receiving
865 pages off the migration stream, while the main thread carries
866 on processing the blob. With this thread able to process page
867 reception, the destination now 'sensitises' the RAM to detect
868 any access to missing pages (on Linux using the 'userfault'
869 system).
870
871 - Running
872
873 POSTCOPY_RUN causes the destination to synchronise all
874 state and start the CPUs and IO devices running. The main
875 thread now finishes processing the migration package and
876 now carries on as it would for normal precopy migration
877 (although it can't do the cleanup it would do as it
878 finishes a normal migration).
879
880 - Paused
881
882 Postcopy can run into a paused state (normally on both sides when
883 happens), where all threads will be temporarily halted mostly due to
884 network errors. When reaching paused state, migration will make sure
885 the qemu binary on both sides maintain the data without corrupting
886 the VM. To continue the migration, the admin needs to fix the
887 migration channel using the QMP command 'migrate-recover' on the
888 destination node, then resume the migration using QMP command 'migrate'
889 again on source node, with resume=true flag set.
890
891 - End
892
893 The listen thread can now quit, and perform the cleanup of migration
894 state, the migration is now complete.
895
896 Source side page map
897 --------------------
898
899 The 'migration bitmap' in postcopy is basically the same as in the precopy,
900 where each of the bit to indicate that page is 'dirty' - i.e. needs
901 sending. During the precopy phase this is updated as the CPU dirties
902 pages, however during postcopy the CPUs are stopped and nothing should
903 dirty anything any more. Instead, dirty bits are cleared when the relevant
904 pages are sent during postcopy.
905
906 Postcopy with hugepages
907 -----------------------
908
909 Postcopy now works with hugetlbfs backed memory:
910
911 a) The linux kernel on the destination must support userfault on hugepages.
912 b) The huge-page configuration on the source and destination VMs must be
913 identical; i.e. RAMBlocks on both sides must use the same page size.
914 c) Note that ``-mem-path /dev/hugepages`` will fall back to allocating normal
915 RAM if it doesn't have enough hugepages, triggering (b) to fail.
916 Using ``-mem-prealloc`` enforces the allocation using hugepages.
917 d) Care should be taken with the size of hugepage used; postcopy with 2MB
918 hugepages works well, however 1GB hugepages are likely to be problematic
919 since it takes ~1 second to transfer a 1GB hugepage across a 10Gbps link,
920 and until the full page is transferred the destination thread is blocked.
921
922 Postcopy with shared memory
923 ---------------------------
924
925 Postcopy migration with shared memory needs explicit support from the other
926 processes that share memory and from QEMU. There are restrictions on the type of
927 memory that userfault can support shared.
928
929 The Linux kernel userfault support works on ``/dev/shm`` memory and on ``hugetlbfs``
930 (although the kernel doesn't provide an equivalent to ``madvise(MADV_DONTNEED)``
931 for hugetlbfs which may be a problem in some configurations).
932
933 The vhost-user code in QEMU supports clients that have Postcopy support,
934 and the ``vhost-user-bridge`` (in ``tests/``) and the DPDK package have changes
935 to support postcopy.
936
937 The client needs to open a userfaultfd and register the areas
938 of memory that it maps with userfault. The client must then pass the
939 userfaultfd back to QEMU together with a mapping table that allows
940 fault addresses in the clients address space to be converted back to
941 RAMBlock/offsets. The client's userfaultfd is added to the postcopy
942 fault-thread and page requests are made on behalf of the client by QEMU.
943 QEMU performs 'wake' operations on the client's userfaultfd to allow it
944 to continue after a page has arrived.
945
946 .. note::
947 There are two future improvements that would be nice:
948 a) Some way to make QEMU ignorant of the addresses in the clients
949 address space
950 b) Avoiding the need for QEMU to perform ufd-wake calls after the
951 pages have arrived
952
953 Retro-fitting postcopy to existing clients is possible:
954 a) A mechanism is needed for the registration with userfault as above,
955 and the registration needs to be coordinated with the phases of
956 postcopy. In vhost-user extra messages are added to the existing
957 control channel.
958 b) Any thread that can block due to guest memory accesses must be
959 identified and the implication understood; for example if the
960 guest memory access is made while holding a lock then all other
961 threads waiting for that lock will also be blocked.
962
963 Postcopy Preemption Mode
964 ------------------------
965
966 Postcopy preempt is a new capability introduced in 8.0 QEMU release, it
967 allows urgent pages (those got page fault requested from destination QEMU
968 explicitly) to be sent in a separate preempt channel, rather than queued in
969 the background migration channel. Anyone who cares about latencies of page
970 faults during a postcopy migration should enable this feature. By default,
971 it's not enabled.
972
973 Firmware
974 ========
975
976 Migration migrates the copies of RAM and ROM, and thus when running
977 on the destination it includes the firmware from the source. Even after
978 resetting a VM, the old firmware is used. Only once QEMU has been restarted
979 is the new firmware in use.
980
981 - Changes in firmware size can cause changes in the required RAMBlock size
982 to hold the firmware and thus migration can fail. In practice it's best
983 to pad firmware images to convenient powers of 2 with plenty of space
984 for growth.
985
986 - Care should be taken with device emulation code so that newer
987 emulation code can work with older firmware to allow forward migration.
988
989 - Care should be taken with newer firmware so that backward migration
990 to older systems with older device emulation code will work.
991
992 In some cases it may be best to tie specific firmware versions to specific
993 versioned machine types to cut down on the combinations that will need
994 support. This is also useful when newer versions of firmware outgrow
995 the padding.
996
997
998 Backwards compatibility
999 =======================
1000
1001 How backwards compatibility works
1002 ---------------------------------
1003
1004 When we do migration, we have two QEMU processes: the source and the
1005 target. There are two cases, they are the same version or they are
1006 different versions. The easy case is when they are the same version.
1007 The difficult one is when they are different versions.
1008
1009 There are two things that are different, but they have very similar
1010 names and sometimes get confused:
1011
1012 - QEMU version
1013 - machine type version
1014
1015 Let's start with a practical example, we start with:
1016
1017 - qemu-system-x86_64 (v5.2), from now on qemu-5.2.
1018 - qemu-system-x86_64 (v5.1), from now on qemu-5.1.
1019
1020 Related to this are the "latest" machine types defined on each of
1021 them:
1022
1023 - pc-q35-5.2 (newer one in qemu-5.2) from now on pc-5.2
1024 - pc-q35-5.1 (newer one in qemu-5.1) from now on pc-5.1
1025
1026 First of all, migration is only supposed to work if you use the same
1027 machine type in both source and destination. The QEMU hardware
1028 configuration needs to be the same also on source and destination.
1029 Most aspects of the backend configuration can be changed at will,
1030 except for a few cases where the backend features influence frontend
1031 device feature exposure. But that is not relevant for this section.
1032
1033 I am going to list the number of combinations that we can have. Let's
1034 start with the trivial ones, QEMU is the same on source and
1035 destination:
1036
1037 1 - qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.2 -> migrates to -> qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.2
1038
1039 This is the latest QEMU with the latest machine type.
1040 This have to work, and if it doesn't work it is a bug.
1041
1042 2 - qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.1 -> migrates to -> qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.1
1043
1044 Exactly the same case than the previous one, but for 5.1.
1045 Nothing to see here either.
1046
1047 This are the easiest ones, we will not talk more about them in this
1048 section.
1049
1050 Now we start with the more interesting cases. Consider the case where
1051 we have the same QEMU version in both sides (qemu-5.2) but we are using
1052 the latest machine type for that version (pc-5.2) but one of an older
1053 QEMU version, in this case pc-5.1.
1054
1055 3 - qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1 -> migrates to -> qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1
1056
1057 It needs to use the definition of pc-5.1 and the devices as they
1058 were configured on 5.1, but this should be easy in the sense that
1059 both sides are the same QEMU and both sides have exactly the same
1060 idea of what the pc-5.1 machine is.
1061
1062 4 - qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.2 -> migrates to -> qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.2
1063
1064 This combination is not possible as the qemu-5.1 doen't understand
1065 pc-5.2 machine type. So nothing to worry here.
1066
1067 Now it comes the interesting ones, when both QEMU processes are
1068 different. Notice also that the machine type needs to be pc-5.1,
1069 because we have the limitation than qemu-5.1 doesn't know pc-5.2. So
1070 the possible cases are:
1071
1072 5 - qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1 -> migrates to -> qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.1
1073
1074 This migration is known as newer to older. We need to make sure
1075 when we are developing 5.2 we need to take care about not to break
1076 migration to qemu-5.1. Notice that we can't make updates to
1077 qemu-5.1 to understand whatever qemu-5.2 decides to change, so it is
1078 in qemu-5.2 side to make the relevant changes.
1079
1080 6 - qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.1 -> migrates to -> qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1
1081
1082 This migration is known as older to newer. We need to make sure
1083 than we are able to receive migrations from qemu-5.1. The problem is
1084 similar to the previous one.
1085
1086 If qemu-5.1 and qemu-5.2 were the same, there will not be any
1087 compatibility problems. But the reason that we create qemu-5.2 is to
1088 get new features, devices, defaults, etc.
1089
1090 If we get a device that has a new feature, or change a default value,
1091 we have a problem when we try to migrate between different QEMU
1092 versions.
1093
1094 So we need a way to tell qemu-5.2 that when we are using machine type
1095 pc-5.1, it needs to **not** use the feature, to be able to migrate to
1096 real qemu-5.1.
1097
1098 And the equivalent part when migrating from qemu-5.1 to qemu-5.2.
1099 qemu-5.2 has to expect that it is not going to get data for the new
1100 feature, because qemu-5.1 doesn't know about it.
1101
1102 How do we tell QEMU about these device feature changes? In
1103 hw/core/machine.c:hw_compat_X_Y arrays.
1104
1105 If we change a default value, we need to put back the old value on
1106 that array. And the device, during initialization needs to look at
1107 that array to see what value it needs to get for that feature. And
1108 what are we going to put in that array, the value of a property.
1109
1110 To create a property for a device, we need to use one of the
1111 DEFINE_PROP_*() macros. See include/hw/qdev-properties.h to find the
1112 macros that exist. With it, we set the default value for that
1113 property, and that is what it is going to get in the latest released
1114 version. But if we want a different value for a previous version, we
1115 can change that in the hw_compat_X_Y arrays.
1116
1117 hw_compat_X_Y is an array of registers that have the format:
1118
1119 - name_device
1120 - name_property
1121 - value
1122
1123 Let's see a practical example.
1124
1125 In qemu-5.2 virtio-blk-device got multi queue support. This is a
1126 change that is not backward compatible. In qemu-5.1 it has one
1127 queue. In qemu-5.2 it has the same number of queues as the number of
1128 cpus in the system.
1129
1130 When we are doing migration, if we migrate from a device that has 4
1131 queues to a device that have only one queue, we don't know where to
1132 put the extra information for the other 3 queues, and we fail
1133 migration.
1134
1135 Similar problem when we migrate from qemu-5.1 that has only one queue
1136 to qemu-5.2, we only sent information for one queue, but destination
1137 has 4, and we have 3 queues that are not properly initialized and
1138 anything can happen.
1139
1140 So, how can we address this problem. Easy, just convince qemu-5.2
1141 that when it is running pc-5.1, it needs to set the number of queues
1142 for virtio-blk-devices to 1.
1143
1144 That way we fix the cases 5 and 6.
1145
1146 5 - qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1 -> migrates to -> qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.1
1147
1148 qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1 sets number of queues to be 1.
1149 qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.1 expects number of queues to be 1.
1150
1151 correct. migration works.
1152
1153 6 - qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.1 -> migrates to -> qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1
1154
1155 qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.1 sets number of queues to be 1.
1156 qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1 expects number of queues to be 1.
1157
1158 correct. migration works.
1159
1160 And now the other interesting case, case 3. In this case we have:
1161
1162 3 - qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1 -> migrates to -> qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1
1163
1164 Here we have the same QEMU in both sides. So it doesn't matter a
1165 lot if we have set the number of queues to 1 or not, because
1166 they are the same.
1167
1168 WRONG!
1169
1170 Think what happens if we do one of this double migrations:
1171
1172 A -> migrates -> B -> migrates -> C
1173
1174 where:
1175
1176 A: qemu-5.1 -M pc-5.1
1177 B: qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1
1178 C: qemu-5.2 -M pc-5.1
1179
1180 migration A -> B is case 6, so number of queues needs to be 1.
1181
1182 migration B -> C is case 3, so we don't care. But actually we
1183 care because we haven't started the guest in qemu-5.2, it came
1184 migrated from qemu-5.1. So to be in the safe place, we need to
1185 always use number of queues 1 when we are using pc-5.1.
1186
1187 Now, how was this done in reality? The following commit shows how it
1188 was done::
1189
1190 commit 9445e1e15e66c19e42bea942ba810db28052cd05
1191 Author: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefanha@redhat.com>
1192 Date: Tue Aug 18 15:33:47 2020 +0100
1193
1194 virtio-blk-pci: default num_queues to -smp N
1195
1196 The relevant parts for migration are::
1197
1198 @@ -1281,7 +1284,8 @@ static Property virtio_blk_properties[] = {
1199 #endif
1200 DEFINE_PROP_BIT("request-merging", VirtIOBlock, conf.request_merging, 0,
1201 true),
1202 - DEFINE_PROP_UINT16("num-queues", VirtIOBlock, conf.num_queues, 1),
1203 + DEFINE_PROP_UINT16("num-queues", VirtIOBlock, conf.num_queues,
1204 + VIRTIO_BLK_AUTO_NUM_QUEUES),
1205 DEFINE_PROP_UINT16("queue-size", VirtIOBlock, conf.queue_size, 256),
1206
1207 It changes the default value of num_queues. But it fishes it for old
1208 machine types to have the right value::
1209
1210 @@ -31,6 +31,7 @@
1211 GlobalProperty hw_compat_5_1[] = {
1212 ...
1213 + { "virtio-blk-device", "num-queues", "1"},
1214 ...
1215 };
1216
1217 A device with diferent features on both sides
1218 ---------------------------------------------
1219
1220 Let's assume that we are using the same QEMU binary on both sides,
1221 just to make the things easier. But we have a device that has
1222 different features on both sides of the migration. That can be
1223 because the devices are different, because the kernel driver of both
1224 devices have different features, whatever.
1225
1226 How can we get this to work with migration. The way to do that is
1227 "theoretically" easy. You have to get the features that the device
1228 has in the source of the migration. The features that the device has
1229 on the target of the migration, you get the intersection of the
1230 features of both sides, and that is the way that you should launch
1231 QEMU.
1232
1233 Notice that this is not completely related to QEMU. The most
1234 important thing here is that this should be handled by the managing
1235 application that launches QEMU. If QEMU is configured correctly, the
1236 migration will succeed.
1237
1238 That said, actually doing it is complicated. Almost all devices are
1239 bad at being able to be launched with only some features enabled.
1240 With one big exception: cpus.
1241
1242 You can read the documentation for QEMU x86 cpu models here:
1243
1244 https://qemu-project.gitlab.io/qemu/system/qemu-cpu-models.html
1245
1246 See when they talk about migration they recommend that one chooses the
1247 newest cpu model that is supported for all cpus.
1248
1249 Let's say that we have:
1250
1251 Host A:
1252
1253 Device X has the feature Y
1254
1255 Host B:
1256
1257 Device X has not the feature Y
1258
1259 If we try to migrate without any care from host A to host B, it will
1260 fail because when migration tries to load the feature Y on
1261 destination, it will find that the hardware is not there.
1262
1263 Doing this would be the equivalent of doing with cpus:
1264
1265 Host A:
1266
1267 $ qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu host
1268
1269 Host B:
1270
1271 $ qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu host
1272
1273 When both hosts have different cpu features this is guaranteed to
1274 fail. Especially if Host B has less features than host A. If host A
1275 has less features than host B, sometimes it works. Important word of
1276 last sentence is "sometimes".
1277
1278 So, forgetting about cpu models and continuing with the -cpu host
1279 example, let's see that the differences of the cpus is that Host A and
1280 B have the following features:
1281
1282 Features: 'pcid' 'stibp' 'taa-no'
1283 Host A: X X
1284 Host B: X
1285
1286 And we want to migrate between them, the way configure both QEMU cpu
1287 will be:
1288
1289 Host A:
1290
1291 $ qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu host,pcid=off,stibp=off
1292
1293 Host B:
1294
1295 $ qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu host,taa-no=off
1296
1297 And you would be able to migrate between them. It is responsability
1298 of the management application or of the user to make sure that the
1299 configuration is correct. QEMU doesn't know how to look at this kind
1300 of features in general.
1301
1302 Notice that we don't recomend to use -cpu host for migration. It is
1303 used in this example because it makes the example simpler.
1304
1305 Other devices have worse control about individual features. If they
1306 want to be able to migrate between hosts that show different features,
1307 the device needs a way to configure which ones it is going to use.
1308
1309 In this section we have considered that we are using the same QEMU
1310 binary in both sides of the migration. If we use different QEMU
1311 versions process, then we need to have into account all other
1312 differences and the examples become even more complicated.
1313
1314 How to mitigate when we have a backward compatibility error
1315 -----------------------------------------------------------
1316
1317 We broke migration for old machine types continuously during
1318 development. But as soon as we find that there is a problem, we fix
1319 it. The problem is what happens when we detect after we have done a
1320 release that something has gone wrong.
1321
1322 Let see how it worked with one example.
1323
1324 After the release of qemu-8.0 we found a problem when doing migration
1325 of the machine type pc-7.2.
1326
1327 - $ qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2
1328
1329 This migration works
1330
1331 - $ qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2
1332
1333 This migration works
1334
1335 - $ qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2
1336
1337 This migration fails
1338
1339 - $ qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2
1340
1341 This migration fails
1342
1343 So clearly something fails when migration between qemu-7.2 and
1344 qemu-8.0 with machine type pc-7.2. The error messages, and git bisect
1345 pointed to this commit.
1346
1347 In qemu-8.0 we got this commit::
1348
1349 commit 010746ae1db7f52700cb2e2c46eb94f299cfa0d2
1350 Author: Jonathan Cameron <Jonathan.Cameron@huawei.com>
1351 Date: Thu Mar 2 13:37:02 2023 +0000
1352
1353 hw/pci/aer: Implement PCI_ERR_UNCOR_MASK register
1354
1355
1356 The relevant bits of the commit for our example are this ones::
1357
1358 --- a/hw/pci/pcie_aer.c
1359 +++ b/hw/pci/pcie_aer.c
1360 @@ -112,6 +112,10 @@ int pcie_aer_init(PCIDevice *dev,
1361
1362 pci_set_long(dev->w1cmask + offset + PCI_ERR_UNCOR_STATUS,
1363 PCI_ERR_UNC_SUPPORTED);
1364 + pci_set_long(dev->config + offset + PCI_ERR_UNCOR_MASK,
1365 + PCI_ERR_UNC_MASK_DEFAULT);
1366 + pci_set_long(dev->wmask + offset + PCI_ERR_UNCOR_MASK,
1367 + PCI_ERR_UNC_SUPPORTED);
1368
1369 pci_set_long(dev->config + offset + PCI_ERR_UNCOR_SEVER,
1370 PCI_ERR_UNC_SEVERITY_DEFAULT);
1371
1372 The patch changes how we configure PCI space for AER. But QEMU fails
1373 when the PCI space configuration is different between source and
1374 destination.
1375
1376 The following commit shows how this got fixed::
1377
1378 commit 5ed3dabe57dd9f4c007404345e5f5bf0e347317f
1379 Author: Leonardo Bras <leobras@redhat.com>
1380 Date: Tue May 2 21:27:02 2023 -0300
1381
1382 hw/pci: Disable PCI_ERR_UNCOR_MASK register for machine type < 8.0
1383
1384 [...]
1385
1386 The relevant parts of the fix in QEMU are as follow:
1387
1388 First, we create a new property for the device to be able to configure
1389 the old behaviour or the new behaviour::
1390
1391 diff --git a/hw/pci/pci.c b/hw/pci/pci.c
1392 index 8a87ccc8b0..5153ad63d6 100644
1393 --- a/hw/pci/pci.c
1394 +++ b/hw/pci/pci.c
1395 @@ -79,6 +79,8 @@ static Property pci_props[] = {
1396 DEFINE_PROP_STRING("failover_pair_id", PCIDevice,
1397 failover_pair_id),
1398 DEFINE_PROP_UINT32("acpi-index", PCIDevice, acpi_index, 0),
1399 + DEFINE_PROP_BIT("x-pcie-err-unc-mask", PCIDevice, cap_present,
1400 + QEMU_PCIE_ERR_UNC_MASK_BITNR, true),
1401 DEFINE_PROP_END_OF_LIST()
1402 };
1403
1404 Notice that we enable the feature for new machine types.
1405
1406 Now we see how the fix is done. This is going to depend on what kind
1407 of breakage happens, but in this case it is quite simple::
1408
1409 diff --git a/hw/pci/pcie_aer.c b/hw/pci/pcie_aer.c
1410 index 103667c368..374d593ead 100644
1411 --- a/hw/pci/pcie_aer.c
1412 +++ b/hw/pci/pcie_aer.c
1413 @@ -112,10 +112,13 @@ int pcie_aer_init(PCIDevice *dev, uint8_t cap_ver,
1414 uint16_t offset,
1415
1416 pci_set_long(dev->w1cmask + offset + PCI_ERR_UNCOR_STATUS,
1417 PCI_ERR_UNC_SUPPORTED);
1418 - pci_set_long(dev->config + offset + PCI_ERR_UNCOR_MASK,
1419 - PCI_ERR_UNC_MASK_DEFAULT);
1420 - pci_set_long(dev->wmask + offset + PCI_ERR_UNCOR_MASK,
1421 - PCI_ERR_UNC_SUPPORTED);
1422 +
1423 + if (dev->cap_present & QEMU_PCIE_ERR_UNC_MASK) {
1424 + pci_set_long(dev->config + offset + PCI_ERR_UNCOR_MASK,
1425 + PCI_ERR_UNC_MASK_DEFAULT);
1426 + pci_set_long(dev->wmask + offset + PCI_ERR_UNCOR_MASK,
1427 + PCI_ERR_UNC_SUPPORTED);
1428 + }
1429
1430 pci_set_long(dev->config + offset + PCI_ERR_UNCOR_SEVER,
1431 PCI_ERR_UNC_SEVERITY_DEFAULT);
1432
1433 I.e. If the property bit is enabled, we configure it as we did for
1434 qemu-8.0. If the property bit is not set, we configure it as it was in 7.2.
1435
1436 And now, everything that is missing is disabling the feature for old
1437 machine types::
1438
1439 diff --git a/hw/core/machine.c b/hw/core/machine.c
1440 index 47a34841a5..07f763eb2e 100644
1441 --- a/hw/core/machine.c
1442 +++ b/hw/core/machine.c
1443 @@ -48,6 +48,7 @@ GlobalProperty hw_compat_7_2[] = {
1444 { "e1000e", "migrate-timadj", "off" },
1445 { "virtio-mem", "x-early-migration", "false" },
1446 { "migration", "x-preempt-pre-7-2", "true" },
1447 + { TYPE_PCI_DEVICE, "x-pcie-err-unc-mask", "off" },
1448 };
1449 const size_t hw_compat_7_2_len = G_N_ELEMENTS(hw_compat_7_2);
1450
1451 And now, when qemu-8.0.1 is released with this fix, all combinations
1452 are going to work as supposed.
1453
1454 - $ qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2 (works)
1455 - $ qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2 (works)
1456 - $ qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2 (works)
1457 - $ qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2 (works)
1458
1459 So the normality has been restored and everything is ok, no?
1460
1461 Not really, now our matrix is much bigger. We started with the easy
1462 cases, migration from the same version to the same version always
1463 works:
1464
1465 - $ qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2
1466 - $ qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2
1467 - $ qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2
1468
1469 Now the interesting ones. When the QEMU processes versions are
1470 different. For the 1st set, their fail and we can do nothing, both
1471 versions are released and we can't change anything.
1472
1473 - $ qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2
1474 - $ qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2
1475
1476 This two are the ones that work. The whole point of making the
1477 change in qemu-8.0.1 release was to fix this issue:
1478
1479 - $ qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2
1480 - $ qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-7.2 -M pc-7.2
1481
1482 But now we found that qemu-8.0 neither can migrate to qemu-7.2 not
1483 qemu-8.0.1.
1484
1485 - $ qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2
1486 - $ qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2
1487
1488 So, if we start a pc-7.2 machine in qemu-8.0 we can't migrate it to
1489 anything except to qemu-8.0.
1490
1491 Can we do better?
1492
1493 Yeap. If we know that we are going to do this migration:
1494
1495 - $ qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2
1496
1497 We can launch the appropriate devices with::
1498
1499 --device...,x-pci-e-err-unc-mask=on
1500
1501 And now we can receive a migration from 8.0. And from now on, we can
1502 do that migration to new machine types if we remember to enable that
1503 property for pc-7.2. Notice that we need to remember, it is not
1504 enough to know that the source of the migration is qemu-8.0. Think of
1505 this example:
1506
1507 $ qemu-8.0 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.0.1 -M pc-7.2 -> qemu-8.2 -M pc-7.2
1508
1509 In the second migration, the source is not qemu-8.0, but we still have
1510 that "problem" and have that property enabled. Notice that we need to
1511 continue having this mark/property until we have this machine
1512 rebooted. But it is not a normal reboot (that don't reload QEMU) we
1513 need the machine to poweroff/poweron on a fixed QEMU. And from now
1514 on we can use the proper real machine.