On Tue, Aug 18, 2020 at 11:06:17AM +0200, Cornelia Huck wrote:
On Tue, 18 Aug 2020 09:55:27 +0100
Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange(a)redhat.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 18, 2020 at 11:24:30AM +0800, Jason Wang wrote:
> > Another point, as we discussed in another thread, it's really hard to make
> > sure the above API work for all types of devices and frameworks. So having a
> > vendor specific API looks much better.
>
> From the POV of userspace mgmt apps doing device compat checking / migration,
> we certainly do NOT want to use different vendor specific APIs. We want to
> have an API that can be used / controlled in a standard manner across vendors.
As we certainly will need to have different things to check for
different device types and vendor drivers, would it still be fine to
have differing (say) attributes, as long as they are presented (and can
be discovered) in a standardized way?
Yes, the control API and algorithm to deal with the problem needs to
have standardization, but the data passed in/out of the APIs can vary.
Essentially the key is that vendors should be able to create devices
at the kernel, and those devices should "just work" with the existing
generic userspace migration / compat checking code, without needing
extra vendor specific logic to be added.
Note, I'm not saying that the userspace decisions would be perfectly
optimal based on generic code. They might be making a simplified
decision that while functionally safe, is not the ideal solution.
Adding vendor specific code might be able to optimize the userspace
decisions, but that should be considered just optimization, not a
core must have for any opertion.
Regards,
Daniel
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